East Bay Times

3,000 migrants begin walk north from southern Mexico

- By Edgar H. Clemente

>> Around 3,000 migrants set out Sunday on what they call a mass protest procession through southern Mexico to demand the end of detention centers like the one that caught fire last month, killing 40 migrants.

The migrants started from the city of Tapachula, near the Guatemalan border. They say their aim is to reach Mexico City to demand changes in the way migrants are treated.

“It could well have been any of us,” Salvadoran migrant Miriam Argueta said of those killed in the fire. “In fact, a lot of our countrymen died. The only thing we are asking for is justice, and to be treated like anyone else.”

But in the past many participan­ts in such procession­s have continued on to the U.S. border, which is almost always their goal. The migrants are mainly from Central America, Cuba, Venezuela, Ecuador and Colombia.

Mexican authoritie­s have used paperwork restrictio­ns and highway checkpoint­s to bottle up tens of thousands of frustrated migrants in Tapachula, making it hard for them to travel to the U.S. border.

Argueta said that when migrants look for work in Tapachula, “they give us jobs, perhaps not humiliatin­g, but the one the Mexicans don't want to do, hard work that pays very little.”

Organizer Irineo Mújica said the migrants are demanding the dissolving of the country's immigratio­n agency, whose officials have been blamed — and some charged with homicide — in the March 27 fire. Mújica called the immigratio­n detention centers “jails.”

The roots of the migrant caravan phenomenon began years ago when activists organized procession­s — often with a religious theme - during Holy Week to dramatize the hardships and needs of migrants. In 2018 a minority of those involved wound up traveling all the way to the U.S. border.

This year's mass walk began well after Holy Week had ended, but Mújica, a leader of the Pueblos Sin Fronteras activist group, called it a “Viacrucis,” or stations of the cross procession, and some migrants carried wooden crosses.

“In this Viacrucis, we are asking the government that justice be done to the killers, for them to stop hiding high-ranking officials,” Mújica said in Tapachula before the long walk began. “We are also asking that these jails be ended, and that the National Immigratio­n Institute be dissolved.”

Some migrants carried banners or crosses reading “Government Crime” and “The Government Killed Them.”

The migrants made it only as far as the town of Alvaro Obregon, about 9 miles (14 kilometers) from Tapachula, before stopping to settle down and rest for the remainder of the day, after having walked from around dawn.

The migrants stretched out under a covered athletic court and under trees at a park in Alvaro Obregon. There was no sign at the start of any police attempt to block them.

Mexican prosecutor­s have said they will press charges against the immigratio­n agency's top national official, Francisco Garduño, who is scheduled to make a court appearance April 21.

Federal prosecutor­s have said Garduño was remiss in not preventing the disaster in Ciudad Juarez despite earlier indication­s of problems at his agency's detention centers.

Prosecutor­s said government audits had found “a pattern of irresponsi­bility and repeated omissions” in the immigratio­n institute.

The fire in Ciudad Juarez, across the border from El Paso, Texas, began after a migrant allegedly set fire to foam mattresses to protest a supposed transfer.

The fire quickly filled the facility with smoke. No one let the migrants out.

Six officials of the National Immigratio­n Institute, a guard at the center and the Venezuelan migrant accused of starting the blaze are already in custody facing homicide charges.

Migrants, especially poorer ones who cannot afford to pay migrant smugglers, have often seen such mass walks, or caravans, as a way to reach the U.S. border.

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