Adilene, 23, holds her youngest daughter Maria Isabel, 1, at the first checkpoint on the Matamoros side of the Gateway International Bridge, watching as cars drive toward the U.S. side in Brownsville, Texas, on Aug. 19. Adilene, a pregnant mother-of-three from #Mexico, hopes to be able to seek asylum in the country. For most, the bridge functions as it should, allowing people to get between the two countries. But on that day, a dozen migrants weren’t getting anywhere at all. They had been told, once again, to wait. The practices that Donald Trump praises for keeping out criminals also punish those who are trying to follow the rules. For months, #Trump administration officials have said that those who wish to enter the U.S. to seek #asylum should do so at an official port of entry. But to those who obey instructions, the process can seem slow at best and arbitrary at worst. Those who spoke to TIME at the bridges had varied stories but shared a determination to cross. Some understood a bit of what could happen to them next. How long could it take to get processed? How likely was it they’d be detained? And if they did ultimately apply for asylum, it remained to be seen whether their stories would qualify. The regulations governing such matters are complicated, and the vast majority who apply are rejected. But in theory, their fates would be decided at #immigration courts, not at the border. Read more on TIME.com. Photograph by @ilanapl for TIME

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TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 8月26日 04時49分


Adilene, 23, holds her youngest daughter Maria Isabel, 1, at the first checkpoint on the Matamoros side of the Gateway International Bridge, watching as cars drive toward the U.S. side in Brownsville, Texas, on Aug. 19. Adilene, a pregnant mother-of-three from #Mexico, hopes to be able to seek asylum in the country. For most, the bridge functions as it should, allowing people to get between the two countries. But on that day, a dozen migrants weren’t getting anywhere at all. They had been told, once again, to wait. The practices that Donald Trump praises for keeping out criminals also punish those who are trying to follow the rules. For months, #Trump administration officials have said that those who wish to enter the U.S. to seek #asylum should do so at an official port of entry. But to those who obey instructions, the process can seem slow at best and arbitrary at worst. Those who spoke to TIME at the bridges had varied stories but shared a determination to cross. Some understood a bit of what could happen to them next. How long could it take to get processed? How likely was it they’d be detained? And if they did ultimately apply for asylum, it remained to be seen whether their stories would qualify. The regulations governing such matters are complicated, and the vast majority who apply are rejected. But in theory, their fates would be decided at #immigration courts, not at the border. Read more on TIME.com. Photograph by @ilanapl for TIME


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