Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Struggle ahead for caravaners left behind

- By Sandra Dibble sandra.dibble@sdtribune.com

TIJUANA, Mexico — Daniel and Martín Castillo, both farmers back in Guatemala, joined the migrant route through Mexico to the U.S. border — hoping to find jobs and build lives safe from crime. But after enduring two consecutiv­e attacks this week at a Tijuana migrant shelter, the brothers from the Quetzalten­ango region said they are more frightened than ever.

“We fled a violent situation there, and we find the same thing here,” said Daniel Castillo, 28.

The Pueblo Sin Fronteras caravan has brought much attention in recent days to the issue of Central Americans fleeing violence and poverty and hoping to find asylum in the United States. While more than 200 presented themselves in recent days at the San Ysidro Port of Entry, untold numbers of Hondurans, Salvadoran­s and Guatemalan­s remain in Mexico — some still waiting to cross, others opting to stay in Mexico.

With no legal immigratio­n status in Mexico, “they are highly vulnerable people, they don’t have money, they don’t have anything,” said Soraya Vazquez, of Espacio Migrante, a Tijuana nonprofit.

The caravan, criticized by President Donald Trump, was the largest such group of Central American migrants to have crossed Mexico in recent years. Traveling in a group has been a means of self-protection for those migrants who are preyed upon by criminals and corrupt officials; but for organizers, it has also been a means of raising awareness of the situation.

Caravan members “did it to be safe crossing through Mexico, they did not do it to engage with U.S. immigratio­n policy,” said Ev Meade, director of the Trans-Border Institute at the University of San Diego. “It’s really a small number that’s attracted a disproport­ionate amount of attention.”

Caravan leaders said that the group swelled to close to 1,700 at one point, but by the time it reached Tijuana late last month, the total was closer to 400.

Days after the caravan has dissipated, many participan­ts who have remained in Mexico say they continue to need protection. In Hermosillo, capital of Sonora state, 15 caravan members launched a hunger strike on Monday outside the offices of Mexico’s National Migration Institute, saying that Mexican officials have yet to comply with a commitment to grant humanitari­an visas that would allow them to live and work in Mexico for an extended period.

“As long as you have legal status, and some security that you’re going to keep it for awhile, you’re not going to be quite as susceptibl­e to being preyed upon,” said Adam Isacson of the Washington Office on Latin America.

This week, Vázquez of Espacio Migrante helped raise bus fare to the state of Sonora for three Honduran brothers, all caravan members who want to stay in Mexico, while their family members cross the border and ask for U.S. asylum. But they are eager to get out of Tijuana, where they feel unsafe, and hope for jobs as farmworker­s in Caborca.

About 80 people were still debating this week whether to ask for U.S. asylum, said Erika Pinheiro, an attorney with Al Otro Lado, a nonprofit group with offices in Tijuana and Los Angeles that has been advising caravan participan­ts. On Monday, she laid out the possibilit­y of asylum in Mexico as she addressed some two dozen caravan members — an option Central American migrants have increasing­ly sought.

Among those listening was Jenny Carolina López, 28, a former housekeepe­r from the Honduran city of San Pedro Sula who said she already has been deported from the United States to Honduras three times. “I have faith that God will open doors for me, so that I can stay here and find a good job,” she said, planning to stay in Mexico.

In Tijuana this week, two attacks on a shelter south of downtown Tijuana served to underscore the dangers some continue to face. The assaults targeted the modest Catholic-run Caritas Tijuana shelter, located in the middle of a low-income hillside neighborho­od rising from a narrow street known as Canon K.

The first attack came at about 1:40 a.m. Sunday, when shelter occupants were awoken by six armed assailants — some with their faces covered — who stole money, cellphones, identifica­tion documents and clothes.

When the attack occurred, a group of 11 transgende­r caravan members preparing to seek asylum at the San Ysidro Port of Entry were among those at the shelter, but said they were in a separate area with a strong lock. Though they escaped harm, they quickly left to find shelter elsewhere.

On Tuesday, they continued to await their opportunit­y to present themselves at the San Ysidro Port of Entry, according to a caravan spokesman.

Early Monday, a dozen migrants on the top floor were jolted awake by smoke and flames: someone had barred their door with a mattress, and set it on fire. “There is no justificat­ion for this,” said Leticia Herrera Hernández, the shelter’s director.

“These are aggression­s against people who are completely defenseles­s.”

 ?? JOEBETH TERRIQUEZ/EPA ?? While Central Americans continued to seek asylum in the U.S., others remain in Mexico looking for a chance.
JOEBETH TERRIQUEZ/EPA While Central Americans continued to seek asylum in the U.S., others remain in Mexico looking for a chance.

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