Baltimore Sun

Tear gas is used at border

Migrants trying to jump fence at Tijuana sprayed by U.S. agents

- By Christophe­r Sherman

TIJUANA, MEXICO — Migrants approachin­g the U.S. border from Mexico were enveloped with tear gas Sunday after a few tried to breach the fence separating the two countries.

U.S. agents shot the gas, according to an Associated Press reporter on the scene. Children were screaming and coughing in the mayhem.

Honduran migrant Ana Zuniga, 23, said she saw migrants open a small hole at a gap on the Mexican side of a levee, at which point U.S. agents fired tear gas at them.

“We ran, but when you run the gas asphyxiate­s you more,” she said while cradling her 3-year-old daughter in her arms.

Mexico’s Milenio TV also showed images of several migrants at the border trying to jump over the fence. Yards away on the U.S. side, shoppers streamed in and out of an outlet mall.

U.S. Border Patrol helicopter­s flew overhead, while U.S. agents held vigil on foot beyond the wire fence in California. The Border Patrol office in San Diego said via Twitter that pedestrian crossings have been suspended at the San Ysidro port of entry at both the East and West facilities. All northbound and southbound traffic was halted.

Earlier Sunday, several hundred Central American migrants pushed past a blockade of Mexican police who were standing guard near the internatio­nal border crossing. They appeared to easily pass through without using violence, and some of the migrants called on each other to remain

peaceful.

They convened the demonstrat­ion to try to pressure the U.S to hear their asylum claims and carried hand-painted American and Honduran flags while chanting: “We are not criminals! We are internatio­nal workers!”

Asecond line of Mexican police carrying plastic riot shields stood guard outside a Mexican customs and immigratio­n plaza.

That line of police had installed tall steel panels behind them outside the Chaparral crossing on the Mexican side of the border.

Migrants were asked by police to turn back toward Mexico.

More than 5,000 migrants have been camped in and around a sports complex in Tijuana after making their way through Mexico in recent weeks via caravan. Many hope to apply for asylum in the U.S., but agents at the San Ysidro entry point are processing fewer than100 asylum petitions a day.

Irineo Mujica, who has accompanie­d the migrants for weeks as part of the aid group Pueblo Sin Fronteras, said the aim of Sunday’s march toward the U.S. border was to make the migrants’ plight more visible to the government­s of Mexico and the U.S.

“We can’t have all these people here,” Mujica said.

Tijuana Mayor Juan Manuel Gastelum on Friday declared a humanitari­an crisis in his border city of 1.6 million, which he says is struggling to accommodat­e the crush of migrants.

President Donald Trump took to Twitter on Sunday to express his displeasur­e with the caravans in Mexico.

“Would be very SMART if Mexico would stop the Caravans long before they get to our Southern Border, or if originatin­g countries would not let them form (it is a way they get certain people out of their country and dump in U.S. No longer),” he wrote.

Mexico’s Interior Ministry said Sunday the country has sent 11,000 Central Americans back to their countries of origin since Oct. 19.

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