Muscat Daily

Thousands of US-bound Honduran migrants cross border into Guatemala

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El Florido, Guatemala - At least 4,500 Honduran migrants pushed past police and crossed into Guatemala on Friday night, passing the first hurdle of a journey north they hope will take them to a better life in the United States.

Seeking to escape poverty, unemployme­nt, gang and drug violence and the aftermath of two devastatin­g hurricanes, the migrants plan to walk thousands of kilometres through Central America to Mexico and then on to the US.

The crowd of men, women and children - many wearing masks due to the COVID-19 pandemic - pushed their way past police and border gates diving the two countries at the town of El Florido, an AFP correspond­ent said.

A Guatemalan police official said the force had let the migrants cross as there were many families with children in the crowd and that using tear gas at night could have resulted in casualties.

“We won’t leave from here until they let us through,” said domestic worker Dania Hinestrosa (23) shortly before attempting to cross the border

Migrants heading to the United States display an Honduran national flag as they hitchhike on the back of a truck near El Florido, in the Honduran department of Copan near the border with Guatemala, on Friday with one of her young daughters. “We have no work or food, so I decided to go to the United States.”

The migrants are seeking a better life in America under Joe Biden after years of tough antiimmigr­ant policy under Donald Trump, but the quest is likely to end in heartbreak for many, with US authoritie­s already having warned off the group.

Guatemala, Mexico and Honduras also have an agreement

with the US to stop north-bound migratory flows from the south of the continent.

Biden has promised ‘a fair and humane immigratio­n system’ and pledged aid to tackle the root causes of poverty and violence that drive Central Americans to the United States.

But Mark Morgan, acting commission­er of US Customs and Border Protection, warned the group last week not to ‘waste your time and money’. The US commitment to the ‘rule of law and public health’ is not affected by the change in administra­tion, he said in a statement.

More than a dozen caravans, some with thousands of migrants, have set off from Honduras since October 2018.

But all have run up against thousands of US border guards and soldiers under Trump, who has characteri­sed immigrants from Mexico as ‘rapists’ who were ‘bringing drugs’ and other criminal activity to the United States.

Mexican authoritie­s said late on Thursday that 500 immigratio­n officers were being deployed to its border with Guatemala in anticipati­on of the caravan's arrival.

Trump said on Friday he was extending a national emergency on the border with Mexico that was first imposed in February 2019 to unlock funding to build his signature wall.

‘Further action is needed to address the humanitari­an crisis and to control unlawful migration and the flow of narcotics and criminals,’ a statement from the White House said.

 ?? (AFP) ??
(AFP)

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