A Mexican immigration official speaks to migrants, including many Haitians, as they line up for their appointment with United States immigration officials to apply for asylum, Wednesday, March 13, 2024, in Tijuana, Mexico. Gang violence wracking Haiti has reverberated among millions who left Haiti for Brazil, Chile, Mexico and the United States. Many feel helpless when they call terrified family members who can't leave the island nation because airports are closed and crossing the Florida Straits by sea to the United States is considered too dangerous and unlikely to succeed. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)
Vivianne Petit Frere, of Haiti, stands in the doorway of the Haitian restaurant she runs Wednesday, March 13, 2024, in downtown Tijuana, Mexico. When she fled to Brazil in 2019, walked through Panamanian jungle two years later, met her husband in Mexico and opened the restaurant, Petit Frere always felt she would eventually return home. Until now. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)
Vivianne Petit Frere, of Haiti, stands in the doorway of the Haitian restaurant she runs Wednesday, March 13, 2024, in downtown Tijuana, Mexico. When she fled to Brazil in 2019, walked through Panamanian jungle two years later, met her husband in Mexico and opened the restaurant, Petit Frere always felt she would eventually return home. Until now. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)
A man from Haiti, center, waits under a tree for his appointment to meet with United States immigration officials to apply for asylum Wednesday, March 13, 2024, in Tijuana, Mexico. Gang violence wracking Haiti has reverberated among millions who left Haiti for Brazil, Chile, Mexico and the United States. Many feel helpless when they call terrified family members who can't leave the island nation because airports are closed and crossing the Florida Straits by sea to the United States is considered too dangerous and unlikely to succeed. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)
Vivianne Petit Frere, of Haiti, sits at a table in the Haitian restaurant she runs Wednesday, March 13, 2024, in downtown Tijuana, Mexico. When she fled to Brazil in 2019, walked through Panamanian jungle two years later, met her husband in Mexico and opened the restaurant, Petit Frere always felt she would eventually return home. Until now. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)
People, including many Haitians, make their way up a ramp as they leave Mexico and cross into the United States for their appointment with officials to seek asylum, Wednesday, March 13, 2024, seen from Tijuana, Mexico. Gang violence wracking Haiti has reverberated among millions who left Haiti for Brazil, Chile, Mexico and the United States. Many feel helpless when they call terrified family members who can't leave the island nation because airports are closed and crossing the Florida Straits by sea to the United States is considered too dangerous and unlikely to succeed. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)
People, including many Haitians, leave Mexico to cross into the United States for their appointment with officials to seek asylum, Wednesday, March 13, 2024, seen from Tijuana, Mexico. Gang violence wracking Haiti has reverberated among millions who left Haiti for Brazil, Chile, Mexico and the United States. Many feel helpless when they call terrified family members who can't leave the island nation because airports are closed and crossing the Florida Straits by sea to the United States is considered too dangerous and unlikely to succeed. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)