San Francisco Chronicle

LGBTQ migrants sticking together for protection

- By Sonia Perez D. Sonia Perez D. is an Associated Press writer.

MATIAS ROMERO, Mexico — Dozens of transgende­r women and gay men in the caravan moving through Mexico with hopes of seeking asylum in the United States have banded together for protection — not from the uncertaint­y of a journey fraught with danger from the gangs who prey on migrants but from their fellow travelers.

Fleeing violence and discrimina­tion back home because of their gender identity or sexual orientatio­n, these LGBTQ migrants have found the journey north to be just as threatenin­g amid catcalls and even physical abuse.

“Sweet little thing!” “Baby, where you going?” “How much do you charge?” These all-toofamilia­r jeers are spewed at them as they make their way with the caravan of several thousand.

Loly Mendez, a 28-year-old who began transition­ing to a woman in her native El Salvador, knows all too well the dangers her fellow transgende­r migrants faced back home: Her best friend, also a transgende­r woman, was murdered for doing the same.

Then Loly herself began getting threats — “that if my breasts were going to grow, they would cut them off,” she said. Threats were always anonymousl­y delivered, which only made her more fearful and finally drove her to flee.

“In my country there is violence, a lack of work and opportunit­ies,” said Loly, who like many of the transgende­r women in the group preferred using only her first name. “In the caravan there is also violence — against the LGBTQ community.”

Loly linked up with the caravan in Tapachula, in southern Mexico, and said she hopes to work in the United States and save up to start a beauty products company — perhaps in Los Angeles or New York. It’s something she has planned for a long time, all the way down to the business’ logo, but she’s never had the money.

“I am going to a country where I know I will achieve my dreams,” Loly said, hopefully.

Reports are common in much of Central America of LGBTQ people being murdered, assaulted and discrimina­ted against, due to their gender identity or sexual orientatio­n.

But getting U.S. asylum is difficult even with proof someone has been the victim of persecutio­n for being transgende­r, said Lynly Egyes, director of litigation at the Transgende­r Law Center in Oakland.

It often takes days or weeks for transgende­r immigrants to get a hearing before an asylum officer. If they are allowed to move forward in the process, many are traumatize­d and struggle to tell their story, Egyes said. They are also much less likely to be granted asylum without a lawyer.

“It is a horrifying process, and not everybody makes it through,” she said.

 ?? Rodrigo Abd / Associated Press ?? A group of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgende­r and queer migrants traveling with the caravan hoping to reach the U.S. border take a photo around a gay pride flag in Sayula, Mexico, Nov. 3.
Rodrigo Abd / Associated Press A group of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgende­r and queer migrants traveling with the caravan hoping to reach the U.S. border take a photo around a gay pride flag in Sayula, Mexico, Nov. 3.

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