Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Migrants scuffle with Mexican troops

Altercatio­n occurs near border river

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CIUDAD HIDALGO, Mexico — Hundreds of Central American migrants waded across the Suchiate River into southern Mexico on Monday in a new test of President Donald Trump’s Central America strategy to keep them away from the U.S. border.

Some scuffled with national guardsmen on the riverbank while others slipped through Mexican lines and trudged off on a rural highway in small groups. Immigratio­n authoritie­s nabbed more there and chased others into the brush.

Most, however, remained at the river’s edge or stood in its muddy waters trying to decide what to do next, after being blocked from crossing en masse over the border bridge leading to Ciudad Hidalgo.

“Mexico’s president said he would give us work and an opportunit­y and look,” said Esther Madrid, a Honduran vendor who left her six children in Honduras. Sitting on a rock among dozens of people who didn’t know what to do next, she offered only one word when asked if she would consider returning to San Pedro Sula: “Never.”

Mexico’s strategy, developed after the first migrant caravan in late 2018, to break up the mass of people repeatedly and into increasing­ly smaller groups appeared to be working. Over the weekend, government officials convinced about 1,000 people they should enter legally over the border bridge.

On Monday, migrants were detained at the river and along the highway. Those who continued could expect a gauntlet of highway checkpoint­s while trying to move north.

After the river crossing Monday, Mexico’s National Immigratio­n Institute issued a statement saying that it would detain any migrants without legal status, hold them in detention centers and deport those who did not legalize their status.

As feared, children suffered most in the clashes. On the Mexican riverbank an unconsciou­s 14-year-old girl was carried away for medical attention. A guardsman said she had started convulsing in the commotion.

Later along the highway, a mother sobbed after realizing her youngest daughter had been separated when migrants tried to escape authoritie­s. Sauri Marubeny Ortega had been walking with her four daughters, ages 5 to 16. Another migrant who had been helping her by carrying the 5-year-old ran in another direction when the migrants scattered and she hadn’t been able to locate them.

“When the federales’ cars began arriving, he ran off that way and I took off after him,” she said. But when she saw an agent nab another daughter she didn’t know who to help and lost sight of the youngest.

“I just beg the person who has her to leave her in a safe place and tell the police,” the mother said as members of Mexico’s migrant assistance force, Grupo Beta, loaded her and three of her girls into an ambulance. “I don’t want to leave here without my daughter.”

The migrants started the day on the bridge connecting Guatemala and Mexico, where they read aloud a letter asking Mexico President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador for permission to cross Mexico en route to the U.S. border.

Mexican officials replied that free passage not be offered. They urged the migrants to enter legally, registerin­g at the bridge and seeking protection and work permits if they wished to remain in Mexico. It was an offer many migrants viewed with suspicion.

That sent the migrants down to the Suchiate, where hundreds forded its shallow waters and soon faced guardsmen.

On the Mexican side, migrants ran from side to side along the river bank, kicking up dust and looking for an opening in the ranks of National Guard troops sent to meet them.

Guardsmen scrambled, too, trying to head off groups and detaining people where they could.

 ?? Santiago Billy/Associated Press ?? More than a thousand Central American migrants gather Monday on the bridge spanning the Suchiate River in Tecun Uman, Guatemala, at the border with Mexico. The group, hoping to reach United States, preparing to walk en masse across the bridge in an attempt to convince authoritie­s there to allow them passage through the country.
Santiago Billy/Associated Press More than a thousand Central American migrants gather Monday on the bridge spanning the Suchiate River in Tecun Uman, Guatemala, at the border with Mexico. The group, hoping to reach United States, preparing to walk en masse across the bridge in an attempt to convince authoritie­s there to allow them passage through the country.

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