Call & Times

Migrants demanding buses to US border

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MEXICO CITY (AP) — Central American migrants in a caravan that has stopped in Mexico City demanded buses Thursday to take them to the U.S. border, saying it is too cold and dangerous to continue walking and hitchhikin­g.

About 200 migrants, representi­ng the roughly 5,000 staying in a stadium in the south of Mexico’s capital, marched to the United Nations office in Mexico City to make the demand for transporta­tion.

The office was closed when the migrants arrived, but a dozen were received by U.N. representa­tives at a nearby location, said Ilberto Sosa Montes, a 45-yearold Honduran who is one of caravan’s coordinato­rs.

“We need buses to continue traveling,” said Milton Benitez, a caravan coordinato­r. Benitez noted that it would be colder in northern Mexico and it wasn’t safe for the migrants to continue along highways, where drug cartels frequently operate.

“This is a humanitari­an crisis and they are ignoring it,” Benitez said as the group arrived at the U.N. office.

The plan was that when the migrant delegation returned to the stadium, roughly a threehour walk from the U.N. office, the migrants would gather in an assembly to decide when they would leave Mexico City and what route they would take to the U.S. border. But the meeting with U.N. officials was continuing into the evening Thursday, representa­tives of the U.N. and the caravan confirmed.

The Mexican government has said most of the migrants have refused offers to stay in Mexico, and only a small number have agreed to return to their home countries. About 85 percent of the migrants are from Honduras, while others are from the Central American countries of Guatemala, El Salvador and Nicaragua.

“California is the longest route but is the best border, while Texas is the closest but the worst” border, said Jose Luis Fuentes of the National Lawyers Guild to gathered migrants.

There have already been reports of migrants on the caravan going missing, though that is of- ten because they hitch rides on trucks that turn off on different routes, leaving them lost.

However, the U.N. human rights agency said its office in Mexico had filed a report with prosecutor­s in the central state of Puebla about two buses that migrants boarded in the last leg of the trip to Mexico City early this week, and whose whereabout­s are not known.

Mexico City is itself more than 600 miles from the nearest U.S. border crossing at McAllen, Texas, and a previous caravan in the spring opted for a much longer route to Tijuana in the far northwest, across from San Diego. That caravan steadily dwindled to only about 200 people by the time it reached the border.

Activists and officials explained the options available to migrants in Mexico, which has offered them refuge, asylum or work visas. The government said 2,697 temporary visas had been issued to individual­s and families to cover them while they wait for the 45-day applicatio­n process for a more permanent status.

Thursday’s meeting with U.N. representa­tives comes two days after U.S. midterm elections in which President Donald Trump had converted the migrants into a campaign issue, portraying them as a major threat.

Marlon Ivan Mendez, a farm worker from Copan, Honduras, was waiting in line for donated shoes to replace the worn crocs he has used since leaving his country three weeks ago. He said he left because gangs were charging him rent to live in his own home.

“It is not fair that the good ones pay for the sinners,” Mendez said of fears that gang members are coming with the caravan.

Christophe­r Gascon, the Mexico representa­tive for the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration, estimated there are perhaps another 4,000 in caravans that are working their way through southern Mexico.

Darwin Pereira, a 23-yearold constructi­on worker from Olanchito, Honduras, left his country with his wife and son, 4, for the very simple reason that “there is no work there.”

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