1 | In this Tuesday, Aug. 18, 2015, photo, a man headed into Mexico stops at a fountain as fellow travelers approach the entrance to the Mexico border crossing in San Ysidro, Calif. |
2 | Starting late Wednesday, Aug. 19, pedestrians going to Tijuana from San Diego at the San Ysidro crossing must choose between a line for Mexicans who get waved through, and a line for foreigners. |
3 | Foreigners must show a passport, fill out a form and - if staying more than a week - pay for a six-month permit. |
4 | SAN DIEGO (AP) - Walking into Mexico at the nation's busiest border crossing with the United States is no longer an uninterrupted stroll for foreigners. |
5 | Pedestrians going to Tijuana from San Diego at the San Ysidro crossing must choose between a line for Mexicans who get walk through unchecked, and a line for foreigners who must show a passport, fill out a form and - if staying more than a week - pay 322 pesos, or roughly $20, for a six-month permit. |
6 | Travelers have long followed similar protocol at Mexican airports, but the new border procedure marks a big change at land crossings that weren't designed to question everyone. |
7 | Pedestrians and motorists have generally entered Mexico unencumbered along the 1,954-mile border with the United States. |
8 | "This is about putting our house in order," said Rodulfo Figueroa, Mexico's top immigration official in Baja California state, which includes Tijuana. |
9 | The switch went off without a hitch late Wednesday. |
10 | About a dozen foreigners stood in line, directed by English-speaking agents to six inspection booths. |
11 | It took about 10 minutes from start to finish. |
12 | Joel Rios of San Diego, who was headed to Sea of Cortez for a fishing trip, was impressed. |
13 | "It's what you see in airports and in other countries, but you're just not used to it in Mexico." |
14 | Andrew Woodruff, who visits Tijuana bars and casinos about twice a week from the San Diego suburb of El Cajon, worried that lines may eventually become longer, discouraging visitors. |
15 | "This is going to be a real bear," Woodruff said after getting his passport stamped in an airy new building that replaced cramped quarters. |
16 | "I will give more thought to what days and times I come." |
17 | Motorists will see no change, and if lines get too long, officials say they will also wave pedestrians through. |
18 | The changes, which have been in the works for years, come as Donald Trump has surged to the top of the Republican field in the U.S. presidential race. |
19 | He has insisted that Mexico sends criminals to the U.S. and pledges to build a border wall at Mexico's expense. |
20 | For Mexico, it is a step toward closing an escape route for American criminals who disappear in Mexico. |
21 | Border inspectors will tap into international criminal databases. |
22 | More than 120 Americans expelled from Mexico this year while living in Baja California had arrest warrants in the U.S., according to Figueroa, delegate of the National Migration Institute. |
23 | Some ordered to leave last year were on the FBI's most-wanted list. |
24 | But authorities say benefits extend beyond stopping unwanted visitors. |
25 | A recent hurricane stranded twice as many Americans in Cabo San Lucas than U.S. authorities thought were there, Figueroa said, and registering as a foreigner would have made it easier to identify those who needed help. |
26 | Figueroa said Mexico can initially process about 1,000 foreigners daily, up from about 50 currently. |
27 | "If the line becomes clogged up, we will just let everybody through," Figueroa said. |
28 | "If we can't check everybody, we won't." |
29 | Figueroa said San Ysidro is believed to be the first U.S. land crossing to have a separate line for foreigners to show passports and that it will serve as a model for others as they are upgraded. |
30 | Aurora Vega, a spokeswoman for the National Migration Institute, referred questions to other departments. |
31 | Officials at the Foreign Relations Department and Mexican Embassy in Washington had no immediate comment. |
32 | About 25,000 pedestrians (and 50,000 motorists) cross daily at San Ysidro to work, shop and play but it is unclear how many are foreigners in Mexico. |
33 | U.S. Customs and Border Protection says about one-third entering San Diego are U.S. citizens, one-third are U.S. legal residents and the rest are from other countries, largely Mexico. |
34 | An unknown number have dual citizenship or residency in the U.S. and Mexico. |