The Denver Post

Migrant caravan could pose test for Biden administra­tion

- Sy Austin iomzy

Thousands of migrants from Honduras have entered Guatemala and plan to continue north to the United States, potentiall­y posing an early test of the immigratio­n policies of President-elect Joe Biden, who has pledged to ease the Trump administra­tion’s restrictio­ns on asylum.

After a few hundred people were able to push past the border police Friday, thousands more followed into Guatemala on Saturday. Officials have said that between 7,000 and 9,000 people entered the country, many bypassing coronaviru­s checks.

The government of Guatemala said that it “regrets this violation of national sovereignt­y and calls on Central American government­s to take actions to avoid putting their inhabitant­s, as well as the communitie­s through which these people pass, at risk in the face of the pandemic.”

The migrants are expected to face obstacles along their route. Guatemalan authoritie­s set up checkpoint­s, blocked parts of the caravan not far from where it entered Guatemala and could begin returning some of the migrants home by bus, The Associated Press reported.

Mexican authoritie­s have posted additional troops and immigratio­n officers along the country’s southern border in anticipati­on of the caravan.

“In our national territory, we have to guarantee orderly, safe and regular migration, with respect for human rights and humanitari­an policies,” Francisco Garduño Yáñez, head of Mexico’s National Immigratio­n Institute, said in a statement Friday.

Members of the group told reporters they were driven to escape crime, poverty and homelessne­ss exacerbate­d by the pandemic and two hurricanes late last year.

“We have nothing to feed to our children, and thousands of us were left sleeping on the streets,” Maria Jesus Paz, a mother of four children, told the Reuters news agency. She said her family had lost their home in the storms, forcing them to flee.

“This is why we make this decision, even though we know that the journey could cost us our lives,” she added.

The back-to-back hurricanes that hit Central America in November “destroyed livelihood­s in a region that was already facing an economic crisis and where the incomes of thousands of families had already been seriously reduced due to the pandemic,” the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross said Saturday.

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