The Mercury News

Migrant caravan halts in Mexico

Trump threatens NAFTA, Honduras for allowing march

-

MATIAS ROMERO, MEXICO >> The caravan of Central American migrants that angered U.S. President Donald Trump was sidelined at a sports field in southern Mexico with no means of reaching the border even as Trump tweeted another threat to Mexico Tuesday.

“The big Caravan of People from Honduras, now coming across Mexico and heading to our “Weak Laws” Border, had better be stopped before it gets there,” Trump wrote. “Cash cow NAFTA is in play, as is foreign aid to Honduras and the countries that allow this to happen.”

The caravan that once numbered 1,150 or more people actually halted days ago in the town of Matias Romero in the southern state of Oaxaca, where participan­ts slept out in the open. After days of walking along roadsides and train tracks, the organizers now plan to try to get buses to take participan­ts to the final event, an immigrants’ rights conference in the central state

of Puebla later this week. Bogged down by logistical problems, large numbers of children and fears about people getting sick, the caravan was always meant to draw attention to the plight of migrants and was never equipped to march to the U.S. border.

“The idea was never for this group of people to reach the border. It was more to achieve a sensible and clear solution” to migrants’ need to leave their countries, said Irineo Mujica, director of Pueblo Sin Fronteras, the activist group behind the annual symbolic event.

With conditions bad in Honduras following

that country’s hotly disputed November presidenti­al elections, unexpected­ly large numbers of people showed for this year’s march.

“We have never seen a march of this size. It is unmanageab­le,” Mujica said.

On Tuesday, the group — mostly Hondurans — spread out on blankets in walkways between buildings, on playing fields and on grassy spots between swing sets. Young children kicked soccer balls through the dust and climbed on resting parents, killing time. Adults gathered around the few power outlets to charge cellphones. A single municipal police officer kept watch.

Aida Raquel Perez Rivera, 31, from San Pedro Sula — one of Honduras’ most violent cities — was sitting on a rolled blanket in the shade. She said she hopes for asylum in the United States because the father of her daughters is trying to kill her.

“I have been threatened with death and I had to leave my daughters back there,” said Perez Rivera. “I left without money, without anything, just the clothes on my back.”

Perez Rivera said she joined the caravan because there was safety in numbers. She said she is also considerin­g seeking asylum in Mexico, but worries she couldn’t support her daughters from Mexico.

On Monday, Mexican immigratio­n officials began taking the names of people interested in filing for asylum, or temporary transit or humanitari­an visas in Mexico.

Mujica said he didn’t know “if that was just to calm down Donald Trump’s tweets, or calm down Donald Trump.” He said the group was waiting for the migration officers. About 150 men already did break off from the march Sunday,

 ?? FELIX MARQUEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Central American migrants stand in line to start their documentat­ion with a Mexican immigratio­n official.
FELIX MARQUEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Central American migrants stand in line to start their documentat­ion with a Mexican immigratio­n official.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States