Wapakoneta Daily News

Crisis at the US border

- By MARÍA VERZA

FRONTERA COROZAL, Mexico (AP) — On the day this week that Mexico imposed new measures to shut down migrant crossings at its southern border, some 1,200 made the trip at a single remote jungle outpost without showing a document to anyone.

A man who helped board the migrants for the five-minute boat ride Sunday from Guatemala across the Usumacinta River knew the count because each one received a ticket.

Mexico wants to again appear cooperativ­e, as in 2019 when, faced with tariffs from then-president Donald Trump, it deployed its newly created National Guard to slow the flow of migrants from Central America.

But the reality is it’s business as usual, with entire communitie­s making a living off the passing migrants.

Their reasons for heading north are familiar: violence, an inability to support their families, the devastatio­n wrought by two major hurricanes in November and egged on by rampant misinforma­tion.

Among those crossing Sunday was Yuri Gabriela Ponce, a 30-year-old mother from Tegucigalp­a, Honduras, along with her husband and three children, ages 2, 5 and 9.

Now, having reached Mexico, they were uncertain how to proceed. As she rested Wednesday in the shade at a crossroads just north of the border, she worried about what would come next.

“They told us that farther ahead there is a checkpoint and we don’t know what to do,” Ponce said. “I hope that with the children they help us.”

The family left Honduras after Ponce’s husband lost his constructi­on job and was unable to find another. They left two older children with relatives.

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