Posted on 06/20/2019 9:55:51 AM PDT by Jim Noble
While African migrants who came from the southern U.S. border wait at an emergency shelter in Portland, some may be moving on to Canada because of immigration fears.
A young girl dances during a performance Wednesday by Pihcintu, a Portland-based African teen singing group, at the emergency shelter for asylum seekers at the Portland Expo. Derek Davis/Staff Photographer The number of African asylum seekers sheltering at the Portland Expo has begun to drop as some families move on including to Canada, according to an immigrant community leader who said the new arrivals fear U.S. immigration officials will arrest them here.
Kristen Dow, Portlands health and human services director, also said that it appears that some recent arrivals have departed the Expo for unknown destinations.
In recent weeks the city has taken in 292 asylum seekers 87 families who have traveled by bus from the southern U.S. border. Most are fleeing political, military and economic problems in Angola and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Portland converted the sports arena into an emergency shelter amid the influx last week.
While the city has registered 259 African asylum seekers since June 9, roughly 223 stayed at the temporary shelter Tuesday night, Dow said.
Some have left, Dow said Wednesday at the Expo. Some could be staying with friends. Weve heard anecdotally that some are moving on to Canada, but we dont know for sure.
Papy Bongibo, president of Portlands Congolese community, said many of the newcomers are communicating with a larger network of Congolese immigrants across the United States and Canada. Bongibo came from the DRC to Atlanta in 2003 and moved to Portland in 2010.
Bongibo, who manages a group home for mentally disabled adults and runs an African arts nonprofit, was at the Expo on Wednesday, interpreting for fellow immigrants who speak French and Lingala, a Bantu language spoken in the Congo. Many of the asylum seekers were speaking on cellphones.
Theres big word of mouth going on, Bongibo said. Theyre hearing that immigration is going to come here and arrest them. That (immigration officials) let them go (in Texas) only to come and get them here. A sort of reverse catch-and-release. Theyre hearing that immigration is going to treat them better in Canada than here, so some of them are going there.
The asylum seekers have traveled for months, traversing Central America and Mexico. They asked for asylum in Texas, and were cleared to travel on while they pursue legal asylum status, federal officials said. The asylum application process can take many months, and applicants are not allowed to work for at least six months after filing an application.
Portland officials have been working with local agencies and reaching out to neighboring communities for help in providing shelter, food and other services to the newcomers, who arent eligible for federal assistance and have been deemed ineligible for state-funding General Assistance.
All of the asylum seekers that have registered with the city since June 9 are families, said Jessica Grondin, the city spokeswoman. Individual asylum seekers were detained at the southern border, she said. How many of the new arrivals to Portland are children is unclear, but Bongibo estimates that more than half appear to be under age 18.
City officials and community members are working to keep the kids occupied as their parents wait for the next step in their journey, said Sally DeLuca, the citys recreation director and operations chief of the asylum response effort.
The Pihcintu Chorus, a multinational refugee and immigrant girls chorus based in Portland, performed for the families at lunchtime Wednesday. The Childrens Museum of Maine and the Boys and Girls Clubs of Southern Maine are expected to organize activities at the Expo in the coming days.
The families have been invited to attend a Sea Dogs baseball game next door at Hadlock Field on Friday evening, and a community member has offered to pay for anything they buy at the concession stands, DeLuca said.
Some families have strolled over to nearby Deering Oaks to spend time in the citys historic park, or brought their kids to Fitzpatrick Stadium next door to play soccer whenever the facility isnt booked.
They love soccer, especially the older kids, so thats been really great, DeLuca said.
But for many of the families staying at the Expo, their concerns remain on finding a safe place to settle and apply for asylum.
Jocelyn Mongo and Kuanda Male Mibo hope that will be somewhere in Maine. Mongo worries that her four children, ages 2 to 14, wont have warm coats when the weather turns cold, she said through Bongibo.
She asks a reporter how long her family must stay at the Expo before they can find a home and start building a new life here. She worked as a housekeeper in the DRC. Her husband was a house painter. He got into trouble last year when he supported a party candidate who didnt win election.
They threatened to kill me for trying to raise my voice, Mibo said through Bongibo. I come here because I have a family that needs to eat. I have to work to feed my family.
Comments are disabled on some stories about sensitive topics.
“Asylum” seekers my eye. Welfare seekers is more like it.
They have been traveling for MONTHS? Who is paying for this?
Thank goodness Texas didn’t get this bunch.
We have to find a way to stop this crap.
“Comments are disabled on some stories about sensitive topics.”
How very....ChiCom of them.
The poor huddled masses coming across the southern border may not be so poor after all. Swiss journalist Urs Gehriger recently visited African migrants who breached the border and hung out on the streets of San Antonio, Texas, waiting to go elsewhere in the country, and he met hostility from people who didnt want to share details about their experiences, conflicted each other, and had rolls of $100 bills. In a recording played on Fox News, Gehriger asks a migrant from Congo how she got to America. She refused to say.
As Gehriger continued to ask simple questions, he said they backtracked and were not answering at all. They wouldnt tell me anything about how they got here, and then they started to get aggressive and they were contradicting each other, he told Laura Ingraham. One said they ran through the forest, and another said no, there was no forest, and they were actually arguing among themselves, Gehriger said. He said they started to get aggressive after questions about money and help.
Gehriger believes the illegals were coached on giving answers to authorities. I had the impression that somebody told them not to speak about it, and acting like now were here, you have to help us, give us money. What I found from an aid worker there, they actually do have money. Quite a few of them, because he spotted them under a tree, right in front of the shelter, counting a roll of money with hundred dollar bills, Gehriger told Ingraham. Hundreds of migrants Congo and Angola were transported to San Antonio the week before, and city officials say they received no warning from the feds that they were coming. KENS published a story showing dozens of people milling around downtown, saying they arrived at the southern U.S. border by way of Ecuador. ETC...
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Africans jump the border----seen holding wads of 100 dollar bills?
Its likely their Third World govt's are paying the freight b/c the govt honchos cash in bigtime from remittances of the US gravy train tax dollars.
Most of the homeless in Portland all camp out right off the Max light rail.
Makes it easy to sell and buy drugs and police can’t impound your car.
Portland is 3% black. That is why they are moving on.
Portland is 3% black. That is why they are moving on.
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Thats the reason the leftist non-profits moved them there. An unknown number will stay.
It amazes me how many people are flooding our southern border only to be imprisoned in a concentration camp.
/s
You should point out that this is Porland, MAINE. Many think Oregon first thing.
How in the hell do they get from the Mexican border to Portland Maine???
I remember when Odumbass was president I would see Bluebird buses at hotels filled with Mexican who could not speak English, staying at hotels.
WHO IS PAYING FOR ALL THIS???
It's working!!
“Asylum’s” new synonym is “Gimme.”
Liberals ignore the fact that these migrants crowd out poor Americans.
Meanwhile, the most functional part of any of these countries is pretty much confined to the infrastructure left behind by the same colonial rulers.
Why do you suppose that it?
Great, move on along. Africans will adjust well in Canada.
Now, there’s an idea. Move all illegals to the Canadian border.
Sweden used to be less than that. Used to be.
“But for many of the families staying at the Expo, their concerns remain on finding a safe place to settle and apply for asylum” After which they will a get enrolled on welfare and begin agitating to have Portland changed to reflect the $#*!hole the pretended to be seeking asylum from.
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