Mexico deploys 500 police after chaos at border
TIJUANA, Mexico — Mexican authorities sought to re-establish order Monday morning after the chaotic day before, when Central American migrants attempted to scale border fencing and U.S. authorities fired tear gas into Mexico.
Nine busloads of Mexican federal police took up positions around the Tijuana sports complex where more than 5,000 migrants are camping out, with many waiting for the chance to apply for asylum in the United States.
Tijuana police said that 39 migrants have been arrested for participating in the unrest and causing disturbances. More than half of them are Hondurans, including five women. Police said they will be deported.
More than 500 Mexican police were estimated to be on hand outside the sports complex.
“They came to support the Tijuana police so that there’s a stronger presence, and the migrants don’t try to do what they did yesterday,” said Victor Coronel, head of migrant affairs at the Tijuana municipal police.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection Commissioner Kevin McAleenan said in a conference call with reporters Monday that 69 migrants were arrested the previous day on the California side of the border. Another nearly 1,000 people ran through vehicle lanes or tried to cross illegally at other parts of the border, he said.
The volatile situation prompted U.S. authorities to close the San Ysidro port of entry, the busiest crossing along the U.S.-Mexico border, for six hours Sunday. The migrant caravan has been camped out in Tijuana for the past two weeks. It began as a few hundred people who convened at a bus station in San Pedro Sula, Honduras, more than a month ago and quickly swelled into the thousands as it marched and hitchhiked north through Guatemala and Mexico.
Mexican authorities say there are now more than 8,000 migrants involved. Many of them joined because traveling with a large group is a relatively inexpensive and safe way to cross Mexico, where migrants face many dangers from the drug cartels that control the humansmuggling trade.
Many of the migrants say they want to apply for asylum in the United States, but U.S. border authorities are processing only a small number of asylum seekers per day, so frustration has grown.
That frustration bubbled over Sunday as a protest march by migrants turned into a chaotic scene, with people trying to breach the border fencing and U.S. authorities using tear gas to repel them.