MEXICO.- If I could turn back time, Miguel Ángel Lujano, from 65 years, I would not work in a bar. He would not have gotten into trouble, managing a business that involved alcohol or getting involved with drug dealers and policemen in the United States, where he lived for almost 30 years.
If all that hadn’t happened, “I would still be there”, he says in an interview with this newspaper from Mexico City, the place he chose to live since he became an elderly returnee two years ago and his life took a turn.
“It doesn’t matter how old you are, you find work very easily; here they put you aside”.
In recent years, the deportation of adults seniors has increased . According to calculations by the Center for Research and Higher Studies in Social Anthropology (CIESAS), in a single decade a 130%.
The calculation was made in 2016 and there was already talk of around 130,000 Elders officially repatriated in a decade and without taking into account those who returned voluntarily.
The government The Mexican government does not record in its statistics from the Ministry of the Interior the specific age of the undocumented immigrants returned by the United States authorities. Classify the information between greater than or less than 13 years.
After 27 years of living between Los Angeles, San Fernando and Pasadena, California, and Harvey, Illinois, Miguel Ángel Lujano did not want to return to his native Tototlán, in the state of Jalisco.
He stayed in the Mexican capital to fight for his “claim” with the support of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, but the case did not prosper and he was left wanting to clean up his image.
He swears and perjures that he was not guilty of the crimes he was accused of and for which he was returned to Mexico with nothing more than willpower.
“All the accusations made against me were false”, warns from the organization’s headquarters Comunidad en Retorno, which focuses mainly on providing help to the elderly.
Comunidad en Retorno frequently goes to the International Airport of Mexico City, where two flights arrive weekly with returnees. There it provides them with information on bureaucratic procedures and invites them to visit the offices for any particular help.
Martha Adriana Sandoval, co-founder of the organization, says that adults Returning older adults currently represent one of the main challenges of migration because most of them are people who went to the United States very young and are not familiar with the country.
“ They have no idea of the paperwork that needs to be done for personal documentationlo can’t find a job and that frustrates them a lot. They have many duels at the same time: the loss of their environment, of the family, of being self-sufficient… ”, she details.
“Those who are lucky survive with remittances, but the rest are very complicated”.
Community in Return currently maintains contact, for example, with a deportee older than 27 years of name Salvador. This Mexican was the coach of a basketball team in Cincinnati, where he contracted a virus that affected his nervous system and lost his mobility. Shortly after, he was deported.
He landed in the Mexican capital in a wheelchair and without knowing anyone.
In recent months he got a job as a security guard at a high school, where they let him live. But he is not comfortable. “She resists accepting her reality. So much so that he does not allow himself to be helped, despite the fact that he has a mobility problem and a skin injury”, details Martha Adriana Sandoval. “He has a family, but they support him very little”.
Old age
The reality of old age has come upon Mexico. The aging of the population was seen by State policies as a projection into the future. It was not until last October, when for the first time the Ministry of Health recognized that its population is rushing to third age.
“Currently there are more older adults than children under five years old,” said Jorge Alcocer Varela, head of the agency, who warned that these population changes “have important economic and social repercussions.”
According to the last National Population Census, in the country there are 14. 5 million older adults who represent the 11% of the total population and the forecast is that the proportion of people older than will continue to increase years. By the end of this decade, the number of older adults will be greater than that of minors 15 years.
Deported migrants are added with disadvantages. It is the civil organizations that help explain the processes for basic procedures such as the voting card with a photograph that serves as identification, the passport. Those that track possible employment opportunities, social support such as pantries, etc.
José Francisco Falcón, from 66 years, have been looking for a job since returning from the United States, where he lived 13 years. He is not unfamiliar with the Mexican system, but he was surprised by the lack of opportunities for older people.
“I left because I lost my job and now it’s worse”, he says.