San Diego Union-Tribune

MEXICO TRUCK CRASH: DISASTER ‘IN THE BLINK OF AN EYE’

Witnesses recall crash that killed dozens of migrants

- BY OSCAR LOPEZ TUXTLA GUTIÉRREZ, Mexico Lopez writes for The New York Times.

The Guatemalan teenager had been packed with more than 150 fellow migrants for hours, he said, jammed in rows of six, some sitting, some standing, some choking on the southern Mexico heat.

Then the speeding tractor-trailer started to fishtail uncontroll­ably, said the teenager, Esvin Chipel Tzoy. Within seconds, the vehicle flipped and crashed, the deadliest single-day disaster in many years to befall Central American migrants who attempt the perilous route through Mexico to the United States.

Mexico officials said at least 54 people have died and 106 hospitaliz­ed in Thursday’s crash. They attributed the disaster to excessive speed and said the driver, who may have passed undetected through immigratio­n checkpoint­s, escaped after the crash.

Interviews on Friday with survivors, witnesses and one of the first medics who rushed to the crash depicted a scene of mangled metal, vomit, puddles of blood and dust coating the bodies of migrants piled atop one another in the highway and what remained of the tractor-trailer.

Chipel said the tractortra­iler began to lurch from side to side and then he heard a loud boom, as if the brakes had failed, followed by the screech of metal as the trailer tipped. Then came the screams from fellow passengers, including children.

Not far behind, Melody Ramírez Moreno, 17, was perched behind her husband on a motorcycle when they saw the tractor-trailer sway precarious­ly. Her husband hit the brakes, but the bike’s front wheel started to twist, she said, as her foot became trapped and mangled in the back wheel.

“The only thing I could hear were the screams, the laments, the cries of the people on the truck,” she said. “Everything happened in the blink of an eye.”

The trailer overturned, slammed into a pedestrian bridge, split apart and scattered a mass of bodies across the highway, including Chipel.

“I couldn’t breathe,” Chipel said, recalling how his nostrils filled with blood and dust. “I thought I was dying.”

Chipel was among the luckier ones, with only a broken wrist and some cuts and scrapes.

The injured migrants, mostly from Guatemala like Chipel, were being treated at hospitals around Tuxtla Gutiérrez, the Chiapas state capital, on Friday.

Chipel said he had left his hometown in Guatemala on Sunday and had been trying to get to the United States in hopes of getting work and supporting his aging parents, who disapprove­d of his decision to leave.

“In Guatemala, you can’t get ahead,” he said. “I wanted to go for that American dream.”

A paramedic who was among the first to arrive at the accident, Luis Eduardo Hernández Trejo, 21, said he could immediatel­y tell many victims were lifeless, especially those still trapped inside the wreckage.

“They were all cadavers,” he said.

Realizing the severity, Hernández said he called for backup and sought to identify the wounded who needed the most urgent help.

The total number of occupants in the tractor-trailer remained unclear. Some survivors, bleeding and limping, fled the scene to avoid possible arrest by immigratio­n police in Chiapas, which borders Guatemala.

The accident revealed in graphic clarity the increasing­ly perilous journey that people from across Latin America endure to reach the U.S. border, risking ruthless criminal cartels, corrupt police officers and hostile terrain for the chance at a better life.

After helping with the triage, Hernández said he was called over by an immigratio­n official to treat a migrant who had tried to flee into a nearby house but had begun feeling ill.

Two other young migrants had tried to flee the scene toward a nearby river, one of them with a cut on his head.

“He was scared,” Hernández said. “He thought we were with the government.”

Heavily armed Mexico National Guard troops surrounded the crash site Friday, the twisted debris from the upturned truck and the bodies of victims long removed. The only telltale signs of the previous day were red streaks of dried blood on the road and a makeshift memorial of candles and fruit.

The crash caused the worst-known single-day death toll for migrants in Mexico since the 2010 massacre of 72 migrants by the Zetas drug cartel in the northern state of Tamaulipas.

The severity may have political implicatio­ns, underscori­ng the desperate and dangerous measures migrants are taking, even as the Mexican and U.S. government­s attempt to stop the flow northward.

The U.S. government has in recent years implemente­d a series of policies taking a harsher approach to deterring migrants. Officials in the Biden administra­tion have repeatedly and explicitly told them not to come.

“I am saddened to see the tragic loss of life and injuries of migrants traveling in Chiapas,” U.S. Ambassador Ken Salazar said Thursday night on Twitter. “Human smugglers disregard human life for their own profit. Please don’t risk your lives to migrate irregularl­y.”

 ?? ALFREDO ESTRELLA AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? A woman lights a candle Friday at the site where a truck carrying more than 150 migrants crashed Thursday in Tuxtla Gutiérrez, Mexico.
ALFREDO ESTRELLA AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES A woman lights a candle Friday at the site where a truck carrying more than 150 migrants crashed Thursday in Tuxtla Gutiérrez, Mexico.

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