Bangkok Post

Mexican migrants head south for holidays

- A migrant child, camping near the Paso del Norte internatio­nal border crossing bridge with his parents, plays during a Christmas celebratio­n, in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, on Wednesday. The boy is among thousands others waiting to apply for asylum in the US.

JALPAN DE SERRA: Poor Central American migrants who form caravans to fend off predatory gangs as they cross Mexico’s interior en route to the United States have made global headlines and drawn the ire of President Donald Trump.

But last week in the Texan border city of Laredo a caravan of about 1,500 families made up of Mexican migrants and Americans of Mexican origin set out in the opposite direction — for their Christmas holidays.

Driving large cars laden with clothes, perfumes and other Christmas presents, the Mexicans, all with US legal status, bore scant resemblanc­e to the Central American migrants trudging north on foot, except for their shared fear of criminal gangs.

“There’s a lot of extortion, corruption, many people have been attacked,” said Jesus Mendoza, a 35-year-old painter who obtained US residency in August and returned to Mexico for the first time this year since 2001.

About half of the 12 million Mexicans living in the United States have legal residency, and Mexico’s Senate expects more than 3 million to return home this year. But doing so by car poses a challenge as Mexico’s northern border regions have been racked by a tide of drug-fuelled violence that led to a record 29,000 murders last year.

With three young children and a wife he met on Facebook, Mendoza was going back to a Mexico different to the one he left behind as a teenager before the country embarked on a socalled war on drugs in 2006 and violence spiralled.

“It’s a sad thing that some don’t want ... to visit their family because of the situation,” he told Reuters in Jalpan de Serra in central Mexico after arriving there on Dec 16.

Mr Trump has called migrant caravans bound for the US “invasions” and has threatened to close the border with Mexico. Caravans moving south into Mexico have been rare over the past decade. But those who reached their family homes say safety in numbers is vital.

“It’s sad that when I enter Mexico I don’t feel safe,” said Mariela Ramirez Palacios, a Mexico-born resident of Oklahoma. “The caravan is safe.”

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REUTERS

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