Edgard Garrido/Reuters
Pensioner Pedro, 72, is seen at his house near a section of the fence separating Mexico and the United States, on the outskirts of Tijuana, Mexico.
More than 100 days into Donald Trump’s presidency, his administration has yet to persuade Congress (or Mexico) to pay for an estimated $21.6 billion wall along the US-Mexico border.
Congress did, however, agree to a budget bill in late April that will fund $146 million in upgrades to the existing steel border fencing, which was first installed in the mid-1990s.
For some, the border is not just a divider between the US and Mexico — it’s home.
Reuters visited some of these folks in Tijuana, Mexico, who live in a variety of home types, from a small treehouse to a mansion with views of California and the Pacific Ocean, on the border.
Their stories are below.
Steel fencing spans about 654 miles of the 1,933-mile US-Mexico border. Other areas, have a “virtual fence,” featuring scanners, guards, and drones.
Carlos Torres, an architect, has lived in a mansion on the Tijuana side for three decades. The fence begins at the end of his garden. He tells Reuters he named his mansion the “First House in Northwest Mexico.”
Torres’ garden is littered with border paraphernalia, including a signpost with arrows that point toward cities in California and Mexico.
Torres doubts Trump’s proposed wall will keep undocumented immigrants from crossing the border. “Walls won’t halt immigration,” he tells Reuters. “Trump doesn’t know what he’s talking about. Here at this fence, people keep crossing every week.”
Pensioner Pedro, 72, holds a similar view. “Neither Trump nor the wall is going to stop anyone, maybe just for a moment,” he tells Reuters.
Pedro lives with his dog Orejona next to the fence.
Joaquin, a Guatemalan chef who prefers to not disclose his last name, lives in a more modest home: a tree house he built himself.
Joaquin tells Reuters he was deported from the US a few years ago with little cash. “I’ve tried to cross so many times that the [US] border guards even got to know me, but I never made it back,” says Joaquin, who makes money by collecting trash in Tijuana that he sells to a local recycling plant.
Carlos, a 27-year-old Mexican man who lives in a small shack near a double fence in Tijuana, was also deported from the US. Here, he is heating up tortillas that he will sell.
Moses and Sara, a carpenter and dental assistant who also prefer to remain anonymous, live in a small house near a portion of the fence that divides Mexico and the US.
The couple uses the border fence to dry their clothes.
Mexican carpenter Porfirio lives with his family on the outskirts of Tijuana. Here he is cutting his son’s hair outside their home.
If the Trump administration’s immigration plan follows through, the fencing near all of these homes may soon become an even taller wall.
Photography by Edgard Garrido. Reporting by Lizbeth Diaz.
Read more stories on Business Insider, Malaysian edition of the world’s fastest-growing business and technology news website.
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