Boston Herald

Protest rattles migrants stuck in Tijuana

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TIJUANA, Mexico — Many Central American migrants camped in Tijuana after crossing Mexico in a caravan said yesterday that a protest over the weekend by residents demanding they leave frightened them and left them even more anxious while they try to get into the United States.

The angry protests have been fed by concerns raised by President Trump’s monthlong warnings that criminals and gang members are in the group and even terrorists, though there is no evidence of that.

About 500 people demonstrat­ed in an affluent section of Tijuana on Sunday against the caravan. Dozens of protesters then marched to an outdoor sports complex near downtown where 2,500 migrants are staying, sleeping on dirt fields and under bleachers after arriving at the border city a week ago.

Dulce Alvarado, 28, from Lempira, Honduras, said she was stepping out of a corner grocery near the complex carrying her 2-year-old son when she was surrounded by the demonstrat­ors chanting “Get out!” and “We don’t want you here!”

“I was very scared,” Alvarado said.

A Tijuana police officer saw them in the crowd and helped them get out and behind police tape marking off the block where the sports complex is located. The protest eventually ended peacefully. Yesterday, a Mexican holiday, streets were quiet with many businesses near the complex closed.

Tensions have built as nearly 3,000 migrants from the caravan poured into Tijuana in recent days after more than a month on the road — and with many more months likely ahead of them while they seek asylum in the U.S. The federal government estimates the number of migrants could soon swell to 10,000.

U.S. border inspectors are processing only about 100 asylum claims a day at Tijuana’s main crossing to San Diego. Asylum seekers register their names in a tattered notebook managed by the migrants themselves that had more than 3,000 names even before the caravan arrived.

For most of this city of 1.6 million, the arrival of thousands of Central Americans is not noticeable.

But many residents fear with the passage of time their presence will take its toll and crime could go up.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? UNWANTED: A demonstrat­or against the Central American migrants clashes with riot police, left, near a temporary shelter Sunday and demonstrat­ors, right, with signs that read in Spanish: ‘No more Caravans,’ and ‘Let’s save Tijuana, no more caravans,’ stand under an statue of indigenous Aztec ruler Cuauhtemoc.
GETTY IMAGES UNWANTED: A demonstrat­or against the Central American migrants clashes with riot police, left, near a temporary shelter Sunday and demonstrat­ors, right, with signs that read in Spanish: ‘No more Caravans,’ and ‘Let’s save Tijuana, no more caravans,’ stand under an statue of indigenous Aztec ruler Cuauhtemoc.
 ?? AP ??
AP

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