Imperial Valley Press

Migrant caravan demands transport as 2nd group enters Mexico

- Hundreds of migrants hitch a ride Mexico, on Tuesday. AP in a truck between Niltepec and Juchitan,

NILTEPEC, Mexico (AP) — More than 1,000 migrants in a second caravan that forged its way across the river from Guatemala began walking through southern Mexico on Tuesday and reached the city of Tapachula — some 250 miles behind a larger group and more than 1,000 miles from the closest U.S. border.

Gerbert Hinestrosa, 54, a straw-hatted migrant from Santa Barbara, Honduras, was traveling with his wife and teenage son in the newest group. Hinestrosa said he realized how hard it would be to reach his goal.

“Right now I feel good,” he said. “We have barely started, but I think it is going to be very difficult.”

Members of the latest caravan say they aren’t trying to catch up with the first because they believe it has been too passive and they don’t want to be controlled. The activist group Pueblo Sin Fronteras has been accompanyi­ng the first group and trying to help it organize.

The first, larger caravan of about 4,000 mainly Honduran migrants passed through Tapachula about 10 days ago and was setting up camp in the Oaxaca state city of Juchitan, which was devastated by an earthquake in September 2017.

The two groups combined represent just a few days’ worth of the average flow of migrants to the United States, and similar ones have occurred regularly over the years, passing largely unnoticed, but this year they have become a hot-button political issue amid an unpreceden­ted push-back from U.S. President Donald Trump.

With just a week before U.S. midterm elections, the Pentagon announced it will deploy 5,200 troops to the Southwest border in an extraordin­ary military operation, and Trump has continued to tweet and speak about the migrants. On Monday he said he wants build tent cities to house asylum seekers, and on Tuesday he floated the possibilit­y of ending the constituti­onal right to U.S. citizenshi­p for babies born in the country to noncitizen­s.

Experts widely dismissed the idea that the president could unilateral­ly change the rules on who is a citizen and said it’s highly questionab­le whether an act of Congress could do it, either.

“According to what they say, we are not going to be very welcome at the border,” Honduran migrant Levin Guillen said when asked about Trump. “But we are going to try.”

The 23-year-old from Corinto, Honduras, was part of the first caravan, whose members set off Tuesday, walking and hitching rides on the highway through Mexico’s narrow, windy southern isthmus. They stuffed themselves into truck beds and sprinted alongside semi-trailer rigs, trying to grab hold and pull themselves up.

Guillen, a farmer, said he had been getting threats in Honduras from the same people who killed his father 18 years ago. He has been on his own since his mom died four years ago, and he hopes to reach an aunt who lives in Los Angeles and have a chance to work and live in peace.

“We just want to a way to get to our final goal, which is the border,” he said.

The first caravan was still about 900 miles (1,450 kilometers) from the nearest U.S. crossing at McAllen, Texas, and possibly much farther if it heads elsewhere. Worn down from long miles of walking and frustrated by the slow progress, many have been dropping out and returning home or applying for protected status in Mexico.

It’s already significan­tly diminished from its estimated peak at over 7,000-strong. A caravan in the spring ultimately fizzled to just about 200 people who reached the U.S. border at San Diego.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States