The Northern Advocate

Trump threatens to close border

US president seizes on migrant plight to stoke Republican base

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As some 3000 Hondurans made their way through Guatemala, attention — and pressure — turned to Mexico, after US President Donald Trump threatened to close the US-Mexico border if authoritie­s there fail to stop them — a nearly unthinkabl­e move that would disrupt hundreds of thousands of legal freight, vehicle and pedestrian crossings each day.

With less than three weeks before the November 6 mid-term elections, Trump seized on the migrant caravan to make border security a political issue and energise his Republican base.

“I must, in the strongest of terms, ask Mexico to stop this onslaught — and if unable to do so I will call up the US Military and CLOSE OUR SOUTHERN BORDER!” Trump tweeted yesterday, adding that he blamed Democrats for what he called “weak laws!”

The threat followed another one earlier this week to cut off aid to Central American countries if the migrants weren’t stopped. However, earlier this year Trump made a similar vow over another large migrant caravan, but didn’t follow through and it largely petered out in Mexico.

Yesterday, Mexico dispatched additional police to its southern border, after the Casa del Migrante shelter on the Guatemalan side of the border reported that hundreds of Hondurans had already arrived there.

Mexican officials say the Hondurans won’t be allowed to enter as a group, and would either have to show a passport and visa — something few have — or apply individual­ly for refugee status, a process that can mean waiting for up to 90 days for approval.

Mexico’s ambassador to Guatemala, Luis Manuel Lopez Moreno, met with leaders of the caravan on Thursday and warned them that Hondurans caught without papers in Mexico would be deported.

Still, the idea that Mexico could close its porous southern border — or that the United States would choke off the lucrative trade and other traffic between the two nations — strained the imaginatio­n.

And, much like Guatemala and Honduras, Mexico is itself a country of many migrants, raising the question of whether the political will exists for a confrontat­ion.

Mexican President-elect Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, who takes office on December 1, wants to avoid repression against migrants and also avoid angering the United States. He has long pushed economic developmen­t as a way to keep people from migrating, and on Thursday he reached out again.

“We will offer jobs, work to Central Americans. Anyone who wants to work in our country will have help, will have a work visa,” he pledged.

As the mass of humanity strung out from Guatemala City to the border, it was unclear whether those who made it the farthest would wait for their countrymen to arrive before attempting a mass crossing into Mexico.

By yesterday, the caravan had dispersed a bit, with the youngest and strongest of the migrants walking ahead together, some boarding buses or trying to hitch rides.

Mauro Verzzelett­i, a priest who runs the Casa del Migrante shelter in the Guatemalan capital, said about 3000 people slept there overnight and left around 4am to continue the journey, adding that “more are arriving”.

 ?? PHOTOS / AP ?? Above: Honduran migrants bound to the US border climb into the bed of a truck in Zacapa, Guatemala. Left: Honduran migrants are taken care of by Guatemalan Red Cross volunteers, in Tecun Uman, Guatemala.
PHOTOS / AP Above: Honduran migrants bound to the US border climb into the bed of a truck in Zacapa, Guatemala. Left: Honduran migrants are taken care of by Guatemalan Red Cross volunteers, in Tecun Uman, Guatemala.
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Donald Trump

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