Times of Suriname

Honduras and Guatemala act to stop migrants after Trump threats

-

GUATEMALA The organizer of a migrant caravan from Honduras was detained yesterday in Guatemala as the U.S. government threatened to withdraw aid from both countries if the flow of migrants north to the United States was not stopped.

Up to 3,000 migrants, according to organizers’ estimates, crossed from Honduras into Guatemala on a trek northward, after a standoff on Monday with police in riot gear.

The Honduran Foreign Ministry called on its citizens not to join the group. The government “urges the Hondurans taking part in this irregular mobilizati­on not to be used by a movement that is clearly political,” it said. Over the border, Guatemalan police officers detained Bartolo Fuentes, a former Honduran lawmaker, from the middle of the large crowd that he and three other organizers had led from San Pedro Sula, Honduras, since Saturday. The moves followed comments by U.S. President Donald Trump that indicated his administra­tion would halt aid if the Central American government­s did not act, his latest effort to demonstrat­e his tough stance on immigratio­n. The Honduran security ministry said Fuentes had been detained because he “did not comply with Guatemalan immigratio­n rules” and would be deported back to Honduras in the coming hours.

Security officials the Honduran border with Guatemala in Agua Caliente blocked the road to prevent another much smaller group getting through, television images from the border showed.

“We can’t attend

at

to people en masse. People are going through one by one,” said police spokesman Alex Madrid, in a radio interview. Guatemala’s government said it did not have official figures for how many migrants from the caravan had already crossed the border.

Adult citizens of the countries of Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador and Nicaragua need only present national identity cards to cross each others’ borders. That rule does not apply when they reach Mexico. Trump took to Twitter to express his annoyance at the caravan, which follows a similar event in May that ultimately led to hundreds of migrants either seeking asylum in the United States or remaining in Mexico.

(Stabroek News)

 ??  ?? Honduran migrants, part of a caravan trying to reach the U.S., walk during a new leg of their travel in Chiquimula, Guatemala. (Photo: Reuters)
Honduran migrants, part of a caravan trying to reach the U.S., walk during a new leg of their travel in Chiquimula, Guatemala. (Photo: Reuters)

Newspapers in Dutch

Newspapers from Suriname