The Columbus Dispatch

Migrant caravan upsets Trump

- By Sonia Perez D.

ESQUIPULAS, Guatemala — President Donald Trump threatened Tuesday to cut aid to Honduras if it doesn’t stop a caravan of about 2,000 migrants, even as they resumed their northward trek through Guatemala with hopes of reaching the U.S. border.

Despite having walked all day Monday with swollen, blistered and aching feet, the group was up shortly after sunrise after sleeping on the ground in their clothes.

Dozens attended Mass at the Basilica in the city of Esquipulas, just across the border from Honduras, before continuing the journey escorted by Guatemalan police.

The group’s numbers have snowballed since about 160 migrants departed Friday from San Pedro Sula, Honduras, with many people joining spontaneou­sly carrying just a few belongings. A Guatemalan priest estimated that more than 2,000 had been fed at three shelters run by the Roman Catholic Church.

The caravan elicited a tough response from Trump.

“The United States has strongly informed the President of Honduras that if the large Caravan of people heading to the U.S. is not stopped and brought back to Honduras, no more money or aid will be given to Honduras, effective immediatel­y,” Trump tweeted. Honduran migrants make their way through Chiquimula, Guatemala, on Tuesday as part of a caravan supposedly on its way to the United States.

However, the Central American nation’s ability to do anything appeared limited as the migrants had already crossed into Guatemala on Monday, twice pushing past outnumbere­d police sent to stop them — first at the border and then at a roadblock outside Esquipulas.

Trump did not follow through on a similar threat to the Central American nation in April over an earlier caravan, which eventually petered out.

There was no immediate public response from the Honduran government. In late September, in a

speech at the U.N. General Assembly, President Juan Orlando Hernandez defended migrants, criticizin­g their treatment in detention centers and the separation of children from their families — without explicitly naming the United States.

“Migration is a human right,” Hernandez said. “For centuries human beings have moved and emigrated and have contribute­d to the social and economic developmen­t of the nations that have taken them in, in search of better opportunit­ies.”

Meanwhile, Mexico’s immigratio­n authority sent

out a fresh warning late Monday that only those who meet entry requiremen­ts would be allowed into the country and that each migrant would have to satisfy Mexican migration agents. Hondurans need visas to visit Mexico in most cases.

Still, it remains unclear if Mexico and other government­s in the region — many of whose own people are migrants — would have the political will to physically halt the determined bordercros­sers, who are fleeing widespread poverty and violence in one of the world’s most murderous countries.

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