



âȘ During a recent trip to a Reynosa, Mexico migrant camp, I took photos of a United Nations-supported International Organization for Migration (IOM) operation handing out cash debit cards to intending and repeat border crossers…
One of two workers at a plastic folding table inside the Reynosa camp, which was filled to capacity with at least 1,200 mostly U.S.-expelled Central Americans, said they were distributing the cards for IOM to help migrants waiting until they cross the Rio Grande at greater leisure to claim asylum, for which most will be declared ineligible years later. Many parents, for instance, got about $400 every 15 days, I was told, or $800 a month if they were still there to collect it, although the support level varied.

My photos of this posted to Twitter and related dispatch for the Center for Immigration Studies drew outrage among some Republican lawmakers. They saw the images as evidence that the U.S. taxpayer-funded IOM was providing material support to an ongoing mass migration harmful to Americaâs national interest.
A couple of weeks later, Texas Rep. Lance Gooden, R-Texas, and 11 other House Republican co-sponsors introduced the âNo Tax Dollars for the United Nations Immigration Invasion Actâ bill. It would prohibit the $3.8 billion in contributions currently proposed in the White House 2022 budget to the IOM and other UN-supported organizations. A Daily Caller story that broke news of the billâs introduction quoted Gooden citing my Reynosa photos.
When I took the photos, I wasnât exactly sure of exactly what I was seeing in Reynosa. But hereâs what I have learned since: The money card is confirmed beyond doubt, but also âhard cash in envelopesâ and âmovement assistance;” and an online IOM âEmergency Manualâ describes what I saw as part of a program it terms âCash-Based Interventions,â or CBIs.
Paying People To Illegally Enter the United States
For starters, country-specific IOM âCash Working Groupsâ are indeed coordinating the handouts of the cash-holding plastic cards I saw (referred to as prepaid debit cards, e-wallets and e-cards) to intending US border crossers in Reynosa, Mexico. But it turns out that is just the tip of the iceberg: the IOM is handing out cash and other material support to intending illegal border crossers in as many as 100 other shelters it helped build, expand, or supports from northern Central America.
Some form of this has been around for years, but starting with a mass-migration event and Trumpâs âRemain in Mexicoâ policy in 2019, the IOM supercharged the program and âinstitutionalizedâ it. According to an annual 2020 IOM report, this more than doubled the number of countries it’s used in during 2020 and increased the number of worldwide recipients by 77 percent to a total of 1.6 million. Those statistics also include Mexico.
The IOM Emergency Manual document says this cash assistance also includes less-visible bank transfers, mobile transfers, and e-vouchers that also go to intending illegal border crossers en route or at least temporarily blocked; like many of those I saw and interviewed in Reynosa. In addition to these other forms of money transfer and the pre-paid plastic cards, the IOM says in its Emergency Manual that it also sometimes hands out âcash in envelopes (hard cash)” and no further details are provided.
Many payments are given as âunconditional; unrestricted cash transfersâ for âmulti-purpose use,â the manual says. Still other handouts subsidize the lodging, rent, and utilities of intending border crossers for âsafe tenure, to reduce the risk of forced eviction.â
Tapping US Taxpayers Before They Even Arrive
Then there is âmovement assistanceâ in the form of conditional or unrestricted cash transfers. The IOM describes this money as providing transportation access after, say for example a camp is closed, but also simply âto sites and other situations related to onward movement of population.â
Of course, to border hawks, all of this looks, feels, and acts like an agency providing the means for illegal border crossings because it is. The IOMâs own stated purpose for cash-based interventions only reinforces that perception: the money is intended to ârestore feelings of choice and empowerment for the beneficiaries.â
Migrant advocates defend cash support to aspiring illegal border crossers as a means to prevent death and suffering among populations they believe have no choice but to migrate and would, whether or not any UN agency helps. However, the legitimate opposite claim is that cash in envelopes or in e-walletsâfilled in part by U.S. taxpayer moneyâcan also be said to enable, sustain, or even entice many driven not by urgent dangers but by a desire for better jobs amid reports that Americans are letting illegal border crossers into the country.
Spending US Taxpayer Money To Encourage âInvasionâ
An aggravating irony among the fast-expanding coterie of Republican congressional critics of the UN largesse is that U.S. taxpayer money is being spent in contravention of American immigration law and the national security interest in controlling the border against economic migration.
âAll of this sounds like theyâre using U.S. tax dollars to encourage this invasion into the nation, and it seems strange to me that we are supporting an organization that directly encourages and funds this,â Gooden said. âItâs totally crazy & I ‘m baffled thereâs not more outrage but I think the lack of outrage is due to the lack of knowledge.â
While it may be true that IOM money relieves the suffering of intending border crossers, it is just as arguably true that it creates the financial breathing room they need to prepare for more opportune crossing moments. The money enables that highly desired payoff, rather than a forced trip back home due to a lack of funds after an expensive smuggling journey that ended with U.S. expulsion. Those tend to arrive back home in their villages with a deterring “donât-try-this” message to their friends and neighbors.
Regarding the importance such messaging plays in the development and deterrence of mass migration crises, Iâve never met an illegal alien who didnât carry a cell phone connected to Internet social media. In interviews with perhaps hundreds of migrants in Mexico and beyond, I learned that this live-time social media grapevine constantly sings with news from the trail upstream that directly informs & determines decisions downstream as to whether to launch north, or remain in place.
So when word of these IOM cash, lodging, and transportation benefits spreads via social media to hometowns, friends and relatives undoubtedly feel more emboldened to invest smuggling money for their own journeys to UN way stations. Because of all this, monthly IOM cash for food, lodging, and âmovementâ assistance amounts to material support for illegal immigration. It influences their decisions to cross.
Increasing US Cash Support For Illegal Immigration
Itâs not completely clear exactly just how much the United States gives IOM to sustain intending border crossers until they succeed, or how many received financial assistance during 2021; but the cash giveaways have been on a steep skyward trajectory since 2019 and only show signs of a continuing upward trend.
The public reporting as to how much the United States gives IOM through the State Department is at best a clouded and opaque secret. President Joe Bidenâs 2022 budget calls for $10 billion in humanitarian assistance âto support vulnerable people abroad.â But the budget provides no actual detailed breakdown or itemization of funds.
A Fiscal Year 2019 summary (starting page 37) by the State Departmentâs Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migration (PRM), which provides the US funding to the IOM as well as many other United Nations agencies, offers one clue of the pre-expansion levels. IOM spent more than $60 million in 2019 for activities in the northern part of South America, Central America, and Mexico during the so-called âcaravan migrant crisisâ earlier that year.
State Department-funneled money helped IOM provide 29,000 people in the Western Hemisphere with cash and voucher assistance and supported 75 shelter way stations much like the one I visited in Reynosa. Along the northern border of Mexico in July 2019, at the height of the âcaravanâ crisis, the IOM provided 600 beds and essential items to the Mexican government and helped it expand existing shelters or built new ones to accommodate âasylum seekers.â
This came as a direct response to the Trump Administrationâs âRemain in Mexicoâ turn-back policy which deported economic migrants who were trying to abuse the asylum system. Still many others chose to wait for Democrats to take the White House in November 2020.
After 2019, the IOM decided to increase the size and scope of the program once President Biden took office and officially ended Trumpâs âRemain in Mexicoâ policy. The extent is unclear, but the IOM now operates institutionalized cash handout programs in Panama, El Salvador, and Mexico. The IOMâs Annual 2020 Report only shows that it gave cash to somewhere between 10,000 and 100,000 people in Mexico during that year.
Whatever the recipient numbers since 2019, the IOM clearly intends to continue to expand the cash giveaways. The IOMâs Emergency Manual stated several times it would do so in alignment with a fairly recent pact among an international consortium of organizations known as The Grand Bargain, of which the IOM is a signatory. The Grand Bargain pact with the IOM dates back to 2016.
An Inter-Agency Standing Committee Grand Bargain website details âIncreasing the use and coordination of cash-based programming.â A November 26, 2021 Grand Bargain caucus on cash coordination had all principals agree to increase the use of cash âbeyond current low levelsâ through the use of even more expanded means of delivery.
The sectionâs first line starts out with familiar language often seen throughout the IOMâs Emergency Manual: âUsing cash helps deliver greater choice and empowerment to affected peopleâŠâ
With a greater number of choices made available to illegal aliens taking advantage of IOM money, aspiring migrants can comfortably remain within striking distance of the southern border to choose the best time for their inevitable illegal border crossings. No one need ever wonder why border hawks hate this system and open borders advocates love it. âȘ


















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