Kuwait Times

Guatemalan security forces break up US-bound caravan

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VADO HONDO, Guatemala: Guatemalan security forces on Monday broke up a caravan of about 4,000 Honduran migrants trying to reach the United States on a journey of thousands of kilometers through Central America on foot, AFP reporters witnessed.

Police advanced on the group in a coordinate­d move, striking batons against their shields to make an intimidati­ng noise, prompting the migrants to scatter. The group was still on Guatemalan soil, and some regrouped to resume their quest for a better life further north. Thousands of others began returning to Honduras after clashing with the police.

Angie, a 21-year-old Honduran migrant, told AFP she was returning to Honduras to try and officially document her entry into Guatemala, as well as presenting a negative Covid-19 test, one of Guatemala’s requiremen­ts for crossing its borders. “I want to continue to the United States, I don’t want to stay in Guatemala,” she said. The caravan, which departed Honduras on Friday, has been held up since Saturday at the town of Vado Hondo in southeast Guatemala, some 50 kilometers (31 miles) inside the border. They have been waiting to pass, sleeping outdoors and blocking a key road where a massive logjam of cargo trucks has built up as a result.

As the migrants retreated before the advancing security forces Monday, several threw stones at police. The officers responded with tear gas as they attempted to drive the group back towards the Honduran border, thus clearing the road for trucks. Women carrying small children were among those to flee before the police. “I am going with my son, in Honduras I have nowhere to live,” a woman told the Guatevisio­n channel, catching her breath after a brisk run. “If we had money we would not be here heading north. They treat us like dogs, it should not be like this,” said another woman, holding a small girl. On Sunday, the group was confronted by police and soldiers with tear gas and batons under strict orders to stop anyone without travel documents or a negative coronaviru­s test from going any further. Several migrants were injured in Sunday’s clashes, a health worker said. Saying they are desperate to escape poverty, unemployme­nt, gang and drug violence and the aftermath of two devastatin­g hurricanes, the migrants aim to cross Guatemala and Mexico, walking all the way to the United States. They are hoping for a warmer welcome, and a better life, in the America of President-elect Joe Biden after years of anti-immigrant rhetoric by Donald Trump.

Some 9,000 have set out from Honduras since Friday. On Monday, Guatemalan migration authoritie­s said more than 1,500, including 208 children, had since returned to Honduras. Some 800 people were stuck in a town neighborin­g Vado Hondo.

 ?? — AFP ?? Security forces block migrants who arrived in caravan from Honduras on their way to the United States, in Vado Hondo, Guatemala, on Monday.
— AFP Security forces block migrants who arrived in caravan from Honduras on their way to the United States, in Vado Hondo, Guatemala, on Monday.

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