Ottawa Citizen

FREEDOM TRAIN

Gang violence and talk of a new U.S. law has sparked a ‘massive exodus’ of illegal immigrants — many of them children — from Central America

- ALBERTO ARCE

On the last day of school, Gladys Chinoy memorized her mother’s phone number in New York City and boarded a bus to Guatemala’s northern border.

With nothing but the clothes on her back, the 14-year-old took a truck-tire raft across the Naranjo River into Mexico and joined a group of five women and a dozen children waiting with one of the smugglers who are paid $6,000 to $7,000 for each migrant they take to the United States.

The women and children waited by the train tracks in this small town in the southern state of Chiapas until the shriek of a train whistle and the glare of headlights pierced the night. Suddenly, dozens of teens and mothers with young children flooded out of darkened homes and budget hotels, rushing to grab the safest places on the roof of the northbound freight train and join a deluge of children and mothers that is overwhelmi­ng the U.S. immigratio­n system.

The number of unaccompan­ied minors detained on the U.S. border has more than tripled since 2011. Children are also widely believed to be crossing with their parents in rising numbers, although the Obama administra­tion has not released year-by-year figures.

The crisis has sparked bitter political debate inside the U.S., with the administra­tion saying crime is driving migrants north from Central America and congressio­nal Republican­s saying Obama’s policies are leading migrants to believe children and their mothers will be allowed to stay.

In interviews along the primary migrant route north to the U.S., dozens of migrants like Gladys indicated that both sides are right.

A vast majority said they were fleeing gang violence that has reached epidemic levels in Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador in recent years. The migrants also uniformly said they decided to head north because they had heard that a change in U.S. law requires the border patrol to swiftly release children and their mothers and let them stay.

The belief that women and children can safely surrender to authoritie­s the moment they set foot in the U.S. has changed the calculus for tens of thousands of parents who no longer worry about their children finishing the dangerous trip north through Mexico with a potentiall­y deadly hike through the desert.

“The United States is giving us a great opportunit­y because now, with this new law, we don’t have to try to cross the desert where so many people die. We can hand ourselves over directly to the authoritie­s,” Gladys said, adding that she hopes to become a doctor.

The smiling teenager with long black hair said she was more excited about seeing her mother again than she was scared about the trip. Her mother said she was aware of the dangers but finally decided the risk was worth it after five years apart.

Reached by phone at home, the mother said she decided to send for her daughter because “if she gets across she can stay here, that’s what you hear.”

“Now they say that all children need to do is hand themselves over to the border patrol,” said the mother, who declined to provide her name because she is in the U.S. illegally.

The migrants’ faith isn’t totally misplaced. While Mexicans generally are returned across the border quickly when they’re caught, overwhelme­d border facilities leave the government with no way to care for most Central American children and their parents.

The Central American minors who cross the border alone have generally been released into the care of relatives already in the U.S., while mothers with children are let go with a notice to appear later in immigratio­n court.

While many children and families may eventually be ordered out of the U.S., many are reporting in calls back home that they’re free to move around the U.S. while their cases wind through the legal system, a process that can take years.

The Obama administra­tion estimates that between October 2013 and September 2014 it will have caught 90,000 children trying to illegally cross the Mexican border without their parents.

Last year, the U.S. returned fewer than 2,000 children to their native countries.

“The story is that you have to give yourself up to the border patrol, provide a contact in the United States and you’ll be freed even though they give you a court date far in the future,” said Ruben Figueroa, a member of the Mesoameric­a Migrant Movement who works in a shelter for migrants crossing the southeast Mexico state of Tabasco. “If you combine this informatio­n with the violence in the streets and extortion keeping people from living their lives, the result is a massive exodus.”

Rocio Quinteros worked selling snacks in front of a school in San Miguel, 128 kilometres outside the capital of El Salvador, until gangsters’ demands for a percentage of her income made it impossible to make a living.

She said that when she could no longer afford to pay, members of the Mara Salvatruch­a gang threatened to recruit her 14-year-old son instead. This month, she told local gang members she was taking her four children, ages 11 to 17, to see their sick grandmothe­r in another city. Then they abandoned their packed-dirt home on the northeaste­rn edge of the city and headed north.

“They ask you for 100 and you give it, then they ask for 200, and they suffocate you until you have to hand over everything, even your house,” she said as she waited with her youngest child in the women’s section of Arriaga’s migrant shelter. “If we had stayed in El Salvador, I already would have had to bury one of my sons.”

With no toys to entertain them, the children in the women’s section watch TV until their parents hear the train is on its way. As she waited, Quinteros spoke to her older children through the bars of the metal door of the men’s section of the shelter.

In Carmensa, the neighbourh­ood that she and her children abandoned, dozens of homes sit empty because their owners have gone to the U.S. The remaining residents described daily lives marred by constant fear.

Gonzalo Velasquez, 66, said he had fled the countrysid­e for San Miguel when El Salvador’s 1980s civil war forced him off his small farm in the countrysid­e.

“I lived through the war but this is different,” he said. “Before, we knew who was shooting. Today nobody knows ... If you have little kids, young ones, it’s better to go so they don’t go into the gangs. The stores are closing because they get asked for payoffs and can’t pay, so it’s better to close.”

Quinteros said she believed she was saving her children by fleeing to a place where they wouldn’t be subject to gang recruitmen­t.

“On the way north you have the hope of living and the risk of death,” she said. “Back home death is certain.”

Late last week, the Obama administra­tion announced it was opening family detention centres on the border to reduce the number of women and children that are released. Vice-President Joe Biden flew to Guatemala the same day to emphasize the dangers of the northbound journey and the low chances of staying in the U.S. for good.

It’s a tough sell for Central American migrants who say life at home has become intolerabl­e.

 ?? REBECCA BLACKWELL/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Aiming for the U.S., Guatemalan migrant Gladys Chinoy, 14, right, waits last Friday with more than 500 other migrants beside the stuck freight train on which they were travelling, outside Reforma de Pineda, Chiapas state, Mexico.
REBECCA BLACKWELL/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Aiming for the U.S., Guatemalan migrant Gladys Chinoy, 14, right, waits last Friday with more than 500 other migrants beside the stuck freight train on which they were travelling, outside Reforma de Pineda, Chiapas state, Mexico.
 ?? REBECCA BLACKWELL/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A Central American migrant practises scaling parked boxcars last week as he awaits the arrival of a northbound freight train in Arriaga, Mexico. His destinatio­n: the U.S.
REBECCA BLACKWELL/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A Central American migrant practises scaling parked boxcars last week as he awaits the arrival of a northbound freight train in Arriaga, Mexico. His destinatio­n: the U.S.

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