Las Vegas Review-Journal

Migrants continue exit from city

Delays in paperwork spur caravan’s march

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HUEHUETAN, Mexico — A group of about 2,000 mainly Central American migrants continued their mass exodus Sunday from the southern Mexico city of Tapachula, reaching a town about 16 miles away.

Migrants walked in the early morning, starting out before dawn, to avoid the heat. Mostly from Honduras and El Salvador, many were accompanie­d by small children.

By midday on the second day of their march they reached the town of Huehuetan, in southern Chiapas state.

Unlike previous marches, the one that started Saturday from Tapachula did not include as many Haitian migrants, thousands of whom reached the U.S. border around Del Rio, Texas in September.

Tens of thousands of migrants from Honduras, El Salvador and Haiti have been waiting in the southern city of Tapachula, near the Guatemalan border, for refugee or asylum papers that might allow them to travel but have grown tired of delays in the process.

On the first day of their march, the migrants pushed past a line of state police who were trying to stop them.

There were scuffles, and a child suffered a slight head wound, but the migrants continued on their way.

They made it only a few miles to the nearby village of Alvaro Obregon Saturday before stopping to rest for the night at a baseball field.

José Antonio, a migrant from Honduras who did not want to give his last name because he fears it could affect his case, said he had been waiting in Tapachula for two months for an answer on his request for some sort of visa.

“They told me I had to wait because the appointmen­ts were full,” the constructi­on worker said. “There is no work there (in Tapachula), so out of necessity I joined this group.”

He said he hopes to make it to the northern city of Monterrey to find work, adding: “We’ll go on, day by day, to get as far as we can.”

Police, immigratio­n agents and National Guard have broken up smaller attempts at similar breakouts earlier this year.

Mexico requires migrants applying for humanitari­an visas or asylum to remain in the border state of Chiapas, next to Guatemala, for their cases to be processed.

 ?? Marco Ugarte The Associated Press ?? Migrants, mostly from Central America, head north Sunday along a coastal highway just outside of Huehuetan, Mexico, in southern Chiapas state.
Marco Ugarte The Associated Press Migrants, mostly from Central America, head north Sunday along a coastal highway just outside of Huehuetan, Mexico, in southern Chiapas state.

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