Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Caravan pauses to mourn, rest

Honduran man dies in accident; migrants still 1,000 miles from U.S.

- MARK STEVENSON

HUIXTLA, Mexico — Still more than 1,000 miles from the goal of reaching the United States, a caravan of Central Americans briefly halted its arduous journey Tuesday to mourn a traveler killed in a road accident, and to rest weary, blistered feet and try to heal illnesses and injuries suffered on the road.

Thousands awakened as the sun rose over a makeshift encampment in a rain-soaked square in the far southern Mexican town of Huixtla.

Sunburned from the daytime heat and chilled by the overnight cold, many appeared to be developing respirator­y problems.

A medical clinic truck pulled into the square in the morning to offer the travelers treatment. Municipal worker Daniel Lopez said the town was offering food and water as well as basic painkiller­s and rehydratio­n liquids, and some children were running high temperatur­es.

Overnight, candles arranged in the shape of a cross were lit in a simple memorial to the dead Honduran man, who fell from the back of an overcrowde­d truck Monday as it traveled on a highway.

“Today we won’t move. Today is a day of mourning,” said activist Irineo Mujica of the Pueblo Sin Fronteras group, which is aiding the travelers. He added that they would leave before dawn today headed for Mapastepec, about 38 miles up the coast.

Such caravans have taken place regularly over the years,

generally without great fanfare, but U.S. President Donald Trump has seized on the phenomenon this year and made it a rallying call for his Republican base ahead of Nov. 6 midterm elections.

Trump has blamed Democrats for what he said were weak immigratio­n laws.

1,000 MILES TO TRAVEL

The caravan, estimated to include more than 7,000 people, has advanced about 45 miles since crossing the border from Guatemala and still faces more than 1,000 miles to the closest U.S. border crossing at McAllen, Texas — and more than twice that to reach the Tijuana-San Diego crossing. Many in the caravan have low odds of qualifying for asylum even if they do make it, as the United States does not consider things like fleeing from poverty or gang violence as a qualifying factor.

A smaller caravan earlier this year headed for the California crossing, dissipatin­g as it advanced, and only about 200 of the 1,200 in that group reached the border.

Nearly 1,700 from the current caravan have already dropped out and applied for asylum in Mexico, according to Mexican authoritie­s, and another 500 have decided to voluntaril­y return home to Honduras.

In Huixtla, donations of food and other supplies were provided. As garbage piled up in the square, the travelers tried to organize it into piles so it could be carted away.

Portable toilets were set up in one corner of the overflowin­g plaza. A few hundred people also were camped out on a basketball court outside town, where there were no bathrooms and little donated food.

Selvin Antonio Guzman of Santa Barbara, Honduras, said, like many others, that he left home because gangs extorting protection fees were making life impossible.

Guzman would have joined his mother and sister in the United States years ago but never had the thousands of dollars needed to pay a smuggler. So he jumped at the chance for the relative safety in numbers and far cheaper alternativ­e that the caravan offered.

Despite the rough conditions, he said that “every day we feel stronger. You see the women and children walking, and feel that there’s no turning back. … I know I am going to make it. We are giving each other strength.”

Adrian Edwards, a spokesman for the U.N. High Commission­er for Refugees agency, said in Geneva that “in any situation like this it is essential that people have the chance to request asylum and have their internatio­nal protection needs properly assessed, before any decision on return [or] deportatio­n is made.”

Trump has criticized Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador for not stopping people from leaving their countries and said in a tweet Monday that the U.S. would “now begin cutting off, or substantia­lly reducing, the massive foreign aid routinely given to them.” He has also threatened to use the military to close down the United States’ southern border.

Still, administra­tion officials have not indicated any action in response to what Trump tweeted was a “National Emergency.”

Mujica, the migrant-rights activist, said Trump is trying to stir up his Republican base by making political hay out of the caravan and border security ahead of the November vote.

“You could say the one who benefits most is him,” he said. And, “if the caravan stops, who wins? Him.”

In interviews along the journey, travelers have said they are fleeing violence, poverty and corruption.

Jimenez Flores, a truck driver, said he couldn’t return to Honduras because a gang attacked his brother and threatened him with death after he called police recently.

“I spent four months hidden. I couldn’t even go into the street,” Flores said. “I can’t go back.”

 ?? AP/MOISES CASTILLO ?? Marvin Sanabria, a Central American traveling with thousands of other migrants in a caravan trying to get to the United States, prays Tuesday after waking up in Huixtla, Mexico. The travelers, still more than 1,000 miles from their goal, briefly halted their journey to rest and mourn a fellow traveler who was killed in a road accident.
AP/MOISES CASTILLO Marvin Sanabria, a Central American traveling with thousands of other migrants in a caravan trying to get to the United States, prays Tuesday after waking up in Huixtla, Mexico. The travelers, still more than 1,000 miles from their goal, briefly halted their journey to rest and mourn a fellow traveler who was killed in a road accident.

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