Royal Oak Tribune

Migrant caravans head to U.S. border, giving Biden early test

- By Michael McDonald and Eric Martin

President-elect Joe Biden says his priorities when he takes office next month will be the pandemic and economic recovery, but he’s facing another crisis that won’t wait: a wave of desperate migrants on his southern border.

Two ruinous hurricanes that wrecked and flooded swathes of Central America last month have increased the number of families planning a risky journey northward. And after a year of travel bans and soaring unemployme­nt, demand to reach the U.S. was already high.

“There are going to be caravans, and in the coming weeks it will increase,” said Jose Luis Gonzalez, coordinato­r of the Guatemala Red Jesuita con Migrantes, a non-government­al organizati­on. “People are no longer scared of the coronaviru­s. They’re going hungry, they’ve lost everything and some towns are still flooded.”

Biden has pledged to abolish many of the migration policies of President Donald Trump, including prolonged detention and separation of families, which were designed to deter illegal migration. This encourages more impoverish­ed Central Americans to make the trip and test the Biden administra­tion, said Gonzalez.

“When there is a change in government in the U. S. or Mexico, caravans start to move because they are testing the waters to see how authoritie­s respond,” he said. “What they see is that the one who said he was going to build a wall and hated Latinos is on his way out.”

On social media, announceme­nts are circulatin­g for caravans, groups of migrants traveling together, leaving San Pedro Sula, Honduras’s second-largest city, which was hit by both storms. The first caravan is scheduled to leave in the coming days and the second in mid-January.

Biden’s advisers are hoping to shift away from Trump’s policies without signaling that the border has been flung open, according to people familiar with the planning. They know that swift, sweeping changes will spur more people to attempt the journey to the U.S.

“President- elect Joe Biden will restore order, dignity and fairness to our immigratio­n system,” said Ned Price, a spokesman for Biden’s transition. “At its core, his immigratio­n policy will be driven by the need to keep families together and end the disastrous policy of family separation.”

A senior Mexican foreign ministry official said migration is likely to remain one of the main challenges in the U. S.-Mexico relationsh­ip, adding that Mexico will continue to promote cooperatio­n for developmen­t to address its root causes and plan to handle it together with partners in the region.

Hurricanes Eta and Iota were part of a record- setting Atlantic season with 30 named storms. Eta alone caused $5 billion worth of damage across the region and affected 3 million people, flooding homes and damaging roads, bridges and crops throughout Nicaragua, Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador. Government­s are still tallying damages from Iota and water has yet to subside in some towns. The countries were already reeling from the economic slump caused by months of Covid-19 lockdowns.

Victor Espinal, 31, whose home in La Lima, Honduras was flooded by both storms, says he is planning to join one of the caravans. He was laid off at the Chiquita banana packing plant where he worked for eight years, after it flooded, and is afraid he won’t find work again soon.

The house where he lived with his wife, two children and his mother-in-law is now empty, and their mudsoaked mattresses and damaged belongings lay in the street outside.

 ?? CARLOS HERRERA — BLOOMBERG ?? Residents inspect destroyed houses in the coastal neighborho­od of El Muelle after Hurricane Iota made landfall in Bilwi, Nicaragua, on Nov. 20, 2020.
CARLOS HERRERA — BLOOMBERG Residents inspect destroyed houses in the coastal neighborho­od of El Muelle after Hurricane Iota made landfall in Bilwi, Nicaragua, on Nov. 20, 2020.

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