Manila Bulletin

Thousands of US troops head for southern border

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WASHINGTON (AFP) - The Pentagon is deploying 5,200 active-duty troops to beef up security along the US-Mexico border, officials announced Monday, in a bid to prevent a caravan of Central American migrants from illegally crossing the frontier.

The move represents a massive military buildup along the border, where some 2,000 National Guardsmen are already working to provide assistance to overwhelme­d authoritie­s.

Trump in recent weeks has repeatedly said more troops are needed to tighten border security, and he has made political capital of the caravan ahead of crucial midterm congressio­nal elections that could see the Democrats regain some degree of power.

According to US Customs and Border Protection Commission­er Kevin McAleenan, US authoritie­s are tracking a group of about 3,500 people traveling north through the Chiapas-Oaxaca area in southern Mexico.

Additional­ly, officials were monitoring another group of about 3,000 people that had gathered at a border crossing between Guatemala and Mexico.

Even as US officials unveiled details of the military deployment, migrants were trying to cross the Suchiate River from Guatemala into Mexico on rafts made from truck tires, or by forming human chains to avoid being swept away.

Others swam across after Mexican authoritie­s refused to open a border bridge.

McAleenan described the situation along the US-Mexico frontier as a ‘’border security and humanitari­an crisis,’’ and said border agents over the past three weeks had apprehende­d about 1,900 people per day illegally crossing.

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