Rosario and her team offer counseling and temporary accommodation, with the final goal of encouraging deportees to leave Tijuana, an aim she says has become more difficult in recent years. “We always encourage deportees to leave the border, but those who remain usually have no connection to Mexico, with their lives and family in the United States,” she said. “We struggle to cope with the volume of deportees at the moment,” she said. “Tijuana already has three layers of fence and buffer zones between Mexico and the United States,” she noted. “With Trump, it’s impossible to predict what will happen, and that uncertainty has left people scared,” he told FNL.
Source: Fox News November 22, 2016 18:33 UTC