Getty images
Indian Gujarat asylum seekers await the American border patrol after crossing Arizona in 2024
Donald Trump has made mass expulsion of undocumented foreign nationals a key policy, the United States, according to around 18,000 Indian nationals, who think they have entered illegally.
Last week, Narendra Modi said that India would resume his nationals who were illegally in the United States, and would also repress “the human trafficking ecosystem”.
“They are children of very ordinary families, and they are attracted to great dreams and promises,” he said during his visit to Washington.
Now, a new article by Abby Budiman and Deveveh Kapur from Johns Hopkins University has highlighted the figures, demography, entry methods, locations and trends relating to undocumented Indians over time.
Here are some of the most striking results.
How many illegal Indians are in the United States?
Unauthorized immigrants represent 3% of the American population and 22% of the population born abroad.
The number of undocumented Indians among them is however disputed, estimates varying considerably due to different calculation methods.
Pew Research Center and Center for Migration Studies of New York (CMS) estimate that 700,000 people in 2022, making it the third group after Mexico and Salvador.
On the other hand, the Migration Policy Institute (MPI) puts the figure at 375,000, classifying India fifth among the countries of origin.
Official data from the Government of the Ministry of Internal Security (DHS) offer another image, reporting 220,000 Indians not authorized in 2022.
The major differences in estimates highlight the uncertainty surrounding the true size of the undenial population undocumented, according to the study.
However, the figures fell from their peak
Indian migrants represent only a small share of the global unauthorized migrant population in the United States.
If the PEW and CMS estimates are accurate, nearly one in four Indian immigrants in the United States is undocumented – an unlikely scenario given the migration models, the study indicates. (Indian immigrants are one of the fastest growth groups in the United States, from 600,000 in 1990 to 3.2 million in 2022.))
The DHS estimated in 2022 that the undeniable undenial population in the United States fell 60% compared to its 2016 peak, going from 560,000 to 220,000.
How did the number of undocumented Indians drop it so strongly from 2016 to 2022? Mr. Kapur says that the data does not provide a clear response, but plausible explanations may be that some have obtained legal status while others have returned, in particular due to difficulties linked to the trash.
However, this estimate does not reflect a wave of 2023 in Indians on American borders, which means that the actual number could now be higher.
Getty images
An American deportation flight transported approximately 100 Indian nationals in early February
Despite the increase in border meetings, estimates by the United States government show no clear increase in the global Indian population without papers of the US financial year (FY) to 2022 to 2022, according to the study.
Meetings refer to cases where non-citizens are arrested by the American authorities while trying to cross the country’s borders with Mexico or Canada.
The visa exceeds the Indians has remained stable at 1.5% since 2016.
The number of Indian action beneficiaries deferred for children’s arrivals (DACA) also increased from 2,600 in 2017 to 1,600 in 2024. The DACA program protects migrants who came to the United States.
To summarize: the undenial population undocumented increased both in number and part of all unauthorized migrants, from 0.8% in 1990 to 3.9% in 2015 before falling to 2% in 2022.
Overvoltage and changing migration routes
The United States has two main land borders.
The southern border along the states of Arizona, California, New Mexico and Texas bordering Mexico sees the most migrant passages. Then there is the border of the United States-Canada covering 11 states.
Before 2010, the meetings involving Indians on both borders were minimal, never exceeding 1,000.
Since 2010, almost all the meetings involving Indians have occurred along the southern Mexican border.
During the year 2024, meetings of Indian nationals on the northern border increased to 36% of all Indian passages, against only 4% the previous year.
Canada had become a more accessible entry point for Indians, with treatment times for shorter visitors than us.
In addition, there was an increase in attempts to pass borders from 2021, and meetings on the border of Mexico culminated in 2023.
“It is not specific to the Indians. It is part of a larger wave of migrants who try to enter the United States after the election of Biden. It is as if there was a high tide Migrants and the Indians were part of it, “said Kapur told me.
Getty images
Immigrants from India walk next to the border fence built by Trump after crossing the United States in January
Where are the illegal Indians?
The study reveals that states with the largest populations of Indian immigrants -California (112,000), Texas (61,000), New Jersey (55,000), New York (43,000) and Illinois (31 000) – also have the largest number of unauthorized Indian immigrants.
The Indians constitute a significant part of the total unauthorized population in Ohio (16%), Michigan (14%), New Jersey (12%) and Pennsylvania (11%).
Meanwhile, states where more than 20% of Indian immigrants are not authorized include Tennessee, Indiana, Georgia, Wisconsin and California.
“We expect this because it is easier to blend and find work in an ethnic company – like a Gujarati working for a Gujarati -American or a Punjabi / Sikh in a similar configuration,” said Mr. Kapur.
Who are the Indians looking for asylum?
The American immigration system allows detainees on the border who fear the persecution of their country of origin to undergo credible “screening for fear”. Those who pass can request asylum in court, resulting in an increase in asylum requests as well as the increasing apprehensions of the borders.
Administrative data does not reveal the exact demographic data of Indian asylum seekers, but legal files on spoken languages provide an overview.
The Punjabi of India have dominated Indian asylum complaints since 2001. After Punjabi, Indian asylum seekers spoke in Hindi (14%), English (8%) and Gujarati (7%).
They deposited 66% of the asylum cases of the 2001-2022 financial year, suggesting the Punjab and the neighboring state of Haryana as the main sources of migrants.
India Punjabi speakers also had the highest asylum approval rate (63%), followed by Hindi speakers (58%). On the other hand, only a quarter of the cases of Gujarati speakers were approved.
“ System game ” – why asylum claims increase
The American data collected by Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) show that Indian asylum requests in the United States have soared.
Requests have increased tenfold in just two years, from around 5,000 in 2021 to more than 51,000 in 2023.
Although this point is more dramatic in the United States, similar trends are visible in Canada, the United Kingdom and Australia, where the Indians are among the largest asylum research groups, according to the study.
Mr. Kapur thinks that it is “largely a means of playing the asylum system rather than an objective fear of persecution, because treatment takes years”.
Given the large number of Punjabi people who ask for asylum, it is not clear what has changed in the state of northern India governed by the Congress Party (2017-22) and, recently, the Party Aam Aadmi (2022 – Present) to lead this increase.
Under Trump’s second presidency, asylum applications should fall.
During its first week, a key application for migrants was closed and withdrawn from application stores, canceling nearly 300,000 pending appointments, including asylum cases already in progress.
Getty images
Punjabi, Indian speakers, have dominated Indian asylum complaints since 2001
What do asylum seekers tell us about India?
American data show that most Indian asylum seekers are Punjabi and Gujarati – groups of the richer states of India, better able to allow high migration costs.
On the other hand, Indian Muslims and marginalized communities and people of conflict zones such as the regions affected by Maoist violence and cashmere rarely seek asylum, the study indicates.
Thus, most Indian asylum seekers are economic migrants, not the poorest or poorest regions in the country.
The arduous trip to the United States – whether via Latin America or as a “false” students in Canada – costs 30 to 100 times per capita income from India, which makes it accessible only to those who have assets for sale or to commit, indicates the study.
Unsurprisingly, Punjab and Gujarat – the main states of origin for unauthorized Indians – are among the richest regions of India, where land values far exceed the yields of agriculture.
“Even illegality takes a lot of money to continue,” said the study.
What feeds illegal Indian migration?
Although the increase in asylum claims may seem linked to a “democratic retro-gel” in India, correlation is not causality, according to the authors.
Punjab and Gujarat have long history of emigration, migrants heading not only in the United States but also in the United Kingdom, Canada and Australia.
Remoks – India received approximately $ 120 billion in 2023 – Fuel aspirations for a better life, trained not by poverty but “relative deprivation”, while families seek to correspond to the success of others to the foreign, according to the study.
A parallel industry of agents and brokers in India collected this request.
The Indian government, says the study, “looked in the other direction, probably because the question of illegal migration is much more a burden for the reception than the countries of sending”.
How many Indians have been expelled?
Between 2009 and 2024, around 16,000 Indians were expelled, according to the Indian Ministry of External Affairs.
These deportations have an average of 750 per year under Obama, 1,550 under the first term of Trump and 900 sous Biden.
The moves of Indian migrants increased between the 2023 and 2024 fiscal year, but the peak was in 2020 with nearly 2,300 deportations.