The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Pandemic deepens Mexico’s homeless crisis

- Natalia Cano

NEZAHUALCO­YOTL, Mexico: Afrer he lost his job because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, Andres Hernandez suddenly found himself trying to survive on the streets with his wife and children, joining Mexico’s growing ranks of homeless.

Their story is an increasing­ly common one in a country where poverty was rampant and many jobs were precarious even before the disease tore through the economy.

“It never crossed my mind that it would happen to me,” Hernandez said.

“I never thought of it and I ended up on the street.”

The printing workshop where Hernandez was employed closed in March, and the 50-year-old had to move out of the room he rented near Mexico City.

He traveled with his family to the capital to look for work, initially sleeping in an area of a hospital where relatives of coronaviru­s patients spent the night.

But when they became scared of falling ill themselves, they moved to a nearby park where life became even tougher.

“Many lowlifes asked us (for money) for soda, but we didn’t have any, and they got aggressive. They even stole my shoes,” said Hernandez, who now wears women’s sneakers that he was given.

He was later separated from his wife and children, who were taken by volunteers to a Christian shelter in the state of Hidalgo, north of the capital.

Millions of jobs lost

The coronaviru­s has killed more than 60,000 people in Mexico and ravaged its economy, the second-largest in Latin America.

More than a million formal jobs have been wiped out, according to the Mexican Institute of Social Security.

The informal sector, which employs more than half of all workers, was hit even harder.

Around 12 million Mexicans stopped working in April a er quarantine measures were introduced, official figures showed, although the situation has since improved as the economy gradually reopens.

The authoritie­s estimated that 2.8 million people were out of work in June.

Those with no safety net are in danger of falling into a new life for which they are unprepared.

“These stories are very hard,” said Luis Enrique Hernandez, whose non-profit group El Caracol helps Mexico City’s homeless.

People who are used to living on the street “learn to survive, but these people don’t,” he said.

Gabriel Contreras eked out a living helping on street stalls until the virus arrived and he was thrown out of the cheap hotel where he was staying.

“They told me that I couldn’t live there anymore, because I might bring the virus back from the street,” the 38-year-old said.

Soaring poverty

The economic crisis has taken a heavy toll on Mexico’s poor, whose numbers are rapidly swelling.

The number of people living in poverty could climb to 62.2 million in 2020 – almost half the population – from 52.4 million in 2018, according to Mexico’s National Council for the Evaluation of Social Developmen­t Policy.

Across the region, the pandemic is expected to impoverish 45 million people, raising the total to 231 million, around 37 per cent of the population, according to the UN Economic Commission for Latin America.

While Hernandez is still unemployed, Contreras recently began working at a pizzeria that hires homeless people.

The two men sleep in a small room paid for by El Caracol in the working-class neighbourh­ood of Nezahualco­yotl in the urban sprawl surroundin­g Mexico City.

Their neighbors, 35-year-old Claudia Garcia and her husband Alberto, used to sell ice creams, but their merchandis­e was confiscate­d due to a lack of permits a few months ago.

A er the hostel where they were staying for 900 pesos (around US$40) a week was closed because of the pandemic, they began living in a park, where someone tried to rape her.

“It was very difficult because one day you’re sleeping in your bed and the next in the grass, in the street,” she said. — AFP

It never crossed my mind that it would happen to me. I never thought of it and I ended up on the street.

Andres Hernandez

 ?? — AFP photos ?? Contreras is now living in a room rented for him by the El Caracol Civil Associatio­n, poses for a picture during an interview with AFP in Ciudad Nezahualco­yotl, State of Mexico.
— AFP photos Contreras is now living in a room rented for him by the El Caracol Civil Associatio­n, poses for a picture during an interview with AFP in Ciudad Nezahualco­yotl, State of Mexico.
 ??  ?? Miguel Angel Marquez, 45, who arrived from his home-state of Michoacan to work as a bricklayer in Mexico City but was le stranded without a job or place to sleep amid the Covid-19 novel coronaviru­s pandemic, speaks during an interview with AFP at a park in Roma neighbourh­ood in Mexico City.
Miguel Angel Marquez, 45, who arrived from his home-state of Michoacan to work as a bricklayer in Mexico City but was le stranded without a job or place to sleep amid the Covid-19 novel coronaviru­s pandemic, speaks during an interview with AFP at a park in Roma neighbourh­ood in Mexico City.
 ??  ?? Claudia Ive e Garcia, from the state of Michoacan, who along with her husband lived in a park for three months a er losing the small ice cream business they had when the Covid-19 novel coronaviru­s pandemic erupted and then their place at a guest house, poses for a picture during an interview with AFP.
Claudia Ive e Garcia, from the state of Michoacan, who along with her husband lived in a park for three months a er losing the small ice cream business they had when the Covid-19 novel coronaviru­s pandemic erupted and then their place at a guest house, poses for a picture during an interview with AFP.

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