Rome News-Tribune

Buses carrying Central American migrants roll up to the US border

- By Elliot Spagat Associated Press

File / Korea Summit Press Pool via AP

At the summit meeting between North Korean leader Kim Jong Un (left) and South Korean President Moon Jae-in, Kim revealed plans to shut down his country’s nuclear test site in May and reveal the process to journalist­s and experts from the United States and South Korea.

— Packed into five old school buses, hundreds of Central American migrants arrived at the U.S. border Sunday for a rally, to be followed by a planned mass attempt to apply for asylum in a direct challenge to the Trump administra­tion.

The migrants, many traveling with children, left a downtown Tijuana shelter where they had been staying. Police with flashing lights escorted the buses to a crossborde­r rally at a Pacific Ocean beach, with supporters gathering on both sides of security fencing.

Asked how he felt as he boarded the bus, Nefi Hernandez of Honduras replied, “Nervous.” He said he intended to seek asylum with his wife and baby daughter, who was born on the journey through Mexico.

President Donald Trump and members of his Cabinet have been tracking the caravan of migrants, calling it a threat to the U.S. since it started March 25 in the

Central American migrants sit on top of the border wall on the beach in San Diego during a gathering of migrants living on both sides of the border.

Mexican city of Tapachula, near the Guatemala border.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions has called the caravan “a deliberate attempt to undermine our laws and overwhelm our system,” pledging to send more immigratio­n judges to the border to resolve cases if necessary.

Trump administra­tion officials have railed against what they call America’s “catch-and-release” policies that allow people requesting asylum to be released from custody into the U.S. while their claims make their Chris Carlson / AP

way through the courts, a process that can last a year.

The arrival at San Diego’s San Ysidro border crossing, the nation’s busiest, marked the end of a monthlong journey by foot, freight train and bus for the migrants. Many of fleeing toward the U.S. border said they feared for their lives in their violence-wracked home countries.

Hernandez, 24, said a gang in his hometown of San Pedro Sula, Honduras, threatened to kill him and his family if he did not sell drugs.

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