Sun.Star Cebu

PROTESTERS TAKE CONTROL OF US BORDER CROSSING

Demonstrat­ions unrelated to inaugurati­on of US President Donald J. Trump

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Protesters took control of vehicle lanes at one of the busiest crossings on the U.S. border Sunday to oppose Mexican gasoline price hikes, waving through motorists into Mexico after authoritie­s abandoned their posts.

Motorists headed to Mexico zipped by about 50 demonstrat­ors at the Otay Mesa port of entry connecting San Diego and Tijuana, many of them honking to show support. The demonstrat­ors waved signs to protest gas hikes and air other grievances against the government of Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto.

Other protests closed southbound traffic for hours at the San Diego-Tijuana San Ysidro port of entry, the busiest crossing along the 2,000-mile bor- der, and halted southbound traffic at one of two crossings in Nogales, Arizona.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection and California Highway Patrol officers closed southbound Interstate 5 to block access to the San Ysidro crossing, diverting traffic several miles east to the Otay Mesa port of entry.

Inspection­s were normal for all travelers entering the U.S. from Mexico. CBP officials didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request seeking more informatio­n about the impact of the protests.

The demonstrat­ions, which are unrelated to the election of U.S. President Donald Trump, have disrupted Mexican border crossings for weeks.

Earlier this month, police in the Mexican state of Sonora fought a pitched three-hour battle to free a border rail cross- ing at Nogales that had been blocked by people protesting the 20 percent nationwide hike in gasoline prices that took effect on New Year’s Day.

Only a small percentage of motorists entering Mexico from the U.S. are stopped for inspection under normal circumstan­ces, but Sunday’s demonstrat­ion gave them an open invitation. Guns and cash from drug sales in the U.S. are often introduced to Mexico by car.

Protesters said Mexican customs officials retreated within minutes after they arrived at the Otay Mesa crossing. About two hours later, a Mexican soldier stood by, but there were few other signs of government presence.

“We’re exercising our right to free speech,” said Brenda Cortez, a 22-year-old college student from Tijuana. “It’s to make sure we are noticed.” /

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