Chattanooga Times Free Press

Aid arrives for migrants at Mexico City stadium

- BY MARIA VERZA AND AMY GUTHRIE

MEXICO CITY — Humanitari­an aid converged around a stadium in Mexico City where thousands of Central American migrants winding their way toward the United States were resting Tuesday after an arduous trek that has taken them through three countries in three weeks.

Mexico City Mayor Jose

Ramon Amieva said 4,500 migrants have arrived at the Jesus Martinez stadium since Sunday, and city officials are bracing to attend as many as 5,500 at the site by Wednesday. Hundreds of city employees and even more volunteers were on hand to sort donations and direct migrants toward food, water, diapers and other basics.

Migrants searched through piles of donated clothes, grabbed boxes of milk for children and lined up to make quick calls home at a stand set up by the Red Cross as U.S. voters went to the polls for midterm elections in which President Donald Trump has made the migrant caravan a central issue.

Employees from the capital’s human rights commission registered new arrivals with biographic­al data— such as age and country of origin— and placed yellow bracelets on wrists to keep count.

Rina Valenzuela wore one of the yellow bracelets as she sat attentivel­y listening to aid workers from the nonprofit Institute for Women in Migration explain the difficulti­es of applying for and securing asylum in the U.S. Valenzuela, who is from El Salvador, decided she’s better off applying for refuge in Mexico.

“Why go fight there, with as much effort and as much suffering as we have gone through, just for them to turn me back? Well, no,” she said.

The aid workers explained that the asylum process in the U.S. could take years, with no guarantee of approval.

Honduran Antonio Perez listened to the warnings but said he remains determined to continue north.

“This is interestin­g but tough news,” he reflected. “But neither this nor Donald Trump is going to stop me.”

The atmosphere at the stadium was more institutio­nal and organized than what migrants encountere­d on the road, where townspeopl­e pushed bags of drinking water, tacos and fruit into their hands as they passed through tiny hamlets in southern Mexico.

But there were signs Tuesday that the stadium already was nearing its capacity to hold 6,000 people.

Maria Yesenia Perez, 41, said there was no space in the stadium when she and her 8-year-old daughter arrived during the night, so the two from Honduras slept on the grass outside. Migrants pitched tents in the parking lot and constructe­d makeshift shelters from plywood covered with blankets and tarps. Forty portable toilets were scattered across the grass.

The stadium’s enclosed space and government interventi­on makes it difficult for aid workers to reach the migrants, said Nancy Rojas, an Oxfam charity worker who has accompanie­d the migrants for weeks.

Four big tents have been set up for women and children to sleep under with thin mattresses and blankets, while men were relegated Monday night to concrete bleachers. Temperatur­es dropped below 52 degrees Fahrenheit during the night in a city some 7,300 feet above sea level and still hundreds of miles from the U.S. border.

“Why go fight there, with as much effort and as much suffering as we have gone through, just for them to turn me back?”

– RINA VALENZUELA, ASYLUM SEEKER FROM EL SALVADOR

 ?? AP PHOTO/MARCO UGARTE ?? Central American migrants settle in a shelter Tuesday at the Jesus Martinez stadium in Mexico City.
AP PHOTO/MARCO UGARTE Central American migrants settle in a shelter Tuesday at the Jesus Martinez stadium in Mexico City.
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