Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Migrant groups enter Guatemala

Honduran asylum seekers are en route to Mexico and eventually the U.S.

- By Sandra Cuffe Cuffe is a special correspond­ent.

CARPAJÁ, Guatemala — Any Ortega has not been home since a pair of hurricanes devastated Honduras in November, leaving hundreds of thousands of people displaced.

Now, Ortega, 30, is among the latest group of Honduran migrants and asylum seekers making their way north through neighborin­g Guatemala toward Mexico — where the government has fortified border security with thousands of national guard troops — and toward the U.S. border hundreds of miles to the north.

This caravan could represent a resurgence of such efforts as President-elect Joe Biden, who has vowed to reform President Trump’s hard-line immigratio­n policies, takes office Wednesday. For Trump, migrant caravans were a vivid symbol of what he called an out-ofcontrol immigratio­n system, and his administra­tion moved to clamp down while successful­ly pressuring Mexico to stop many U.S.bound migrants long before they reached the border.

Biden’s election has raised hopes in Central America — devastated by last year’s hurricane-driven f loods, in addition to chronic issues of poverty and gang violence — that the incoming administra­tion may ease its policies for asylum seekers and other migrants. This caravan could prove an early test for the new administra­tion, as will relations with the Honduran government, led by President Juan Orlando Hernández, who, along with his security forces, has been implicated in three U.S. drug-traffickin­g cases.

In Ortega’s case, floods caused by hurricanes Eta and Iota inundated her neighborho­od in low-lying Chamelecón, an urban area just south of San Pedro Sula in northweste­rn Honduras.

“We lost everything, absolutely everything,” Ortega said late Friday night as she walked with the group after crossing into Guatemala.

The storms affected millions of people across Central America. Ortega took shelter with her three children and mother in a makeshift camp under a bridge. Floodwater­s eventually receded, but they were unable to return home.

“Houses are still full of mud,” she said. “There has been no help from the government, only from other people.”

Between coronaviru­s lockdowns, the related recession and hurricane damage, Ortega has been unable to find work. So she left her children, ages 8, 12 and 14, in the care of their father and other relatives and set out Friday morning with the U.S.-bound migrant caravan.

Some 7,500 Honduran migrants and asylum seekers are making their way north. They face military blockades in Guatemala, a fortified Mexican southern border and an uncertain U.S. response under a new administra­tion, should they make it that far. By Saturday, most had entered Guatemala via the El Florido border crossing, according to estimates by Guatemala’s National Immigratio­n Institute.

Honduran and Guatemalan security forces in the border region had blocked the way, but people pushed on, and the police eventually relented.

“The government of Guatemala regrets this transgress­ion of national sovereignt­y,” the government said Saturday in a statement, calling on Honduran authoritie­s to “contain the mass departure of their inhabitant­s.”

A baby’s cries rang out late Friday night as the caravan advanced on foot into Guatemala under a starfilled sky.

“Don’t worry, we’re almost there,” someone joked in response, and a young man mimicked a bus driver calling out destinatio­ns for passengers: “Guatemala, Tecún Umán, Mexico, Tijuana!”

Guatemala enacted emergency measures Thursday in seven of the country’s 22 department­s, restrictin­g freedom of movement and assembly and deploying roughly 2,000 soldiers and police to enforce entry requiremen­ts, which now include negative coronaviru­s test results.

Guatemala’s coronaviru­s testing rate is among the lowest in the region, but the country of 17 million has topped 148,500 confirmed cases, more than Honduras and more per capita than Mexico.

Guatemala and Mexico both maintain that military reinforcem­ents are a necessary part of efforts to safeguard public health. Rosario Martínez, a Guatemalan researcher with the Latin American Social Studies Institute, disagrees.

“It is the perfect excuse,” said Martínez, who has been researchin­g shifting Central American immigratio­n patterns in recent years and, particular­ly, since the onset of the pandemic in March.

“The pandemic is being used as a pretext to stop the advance of caravans,” she said.

At a checkpoint in La Ruidosa, a key highway junction in eastern Guatemala, soldiers and police stopped vehicles Friday to check identifica­tion documents in search of Hondurans who had either traveled on their own or split from the main caravan group.

Many of the van and minibus transport vehicles were packed with passengers, not all of whom wore masks, in violation of government measures to contain the spread of COVID-19. The Times did not witness any health citations being handed out Friday afternoon.

Health officials, who were set up at the checkpoint under an olive-green tarp labeled “U.S.,” informed Hondurans of the requiremen­t of a negative test result for entry. Those who did not have one were held in the area.

Roger, who requested that his last name not be used for security reasons, was one of more than two dozen Hondurans stuck at the checkpoint Friday afternoon. The 22-year-old said he left Thursday from Catacamas, in eastern Honduras, with two friends and boated across the Motagua River into Guatemala before running into the checkpoint.

“We had already planned to leave, caravan or not,” he said.

Roger has a small gunrepair workshop, but Honduras has implemente­d strict lockdown measures off and on for months, and he has been unable to work. That was his main reason for leaving, but violence was also a factor, he said.

A police bus arrived to take Roger and the other Hondurans back across the border. They were among roughly 600 people sent back Friday from checkpoint­s and border regions around Guatemala.

Roger said he planned to see if he could afford a coronaviru­s test near the border to come right back. He knows Biden will take office this month and is hoping immigratio­n and asylum restrictio­ns enacted in recent years will ease up.

“It could be a good opportunit­y,” he said.

Biden has announced plans to send a bill to Congress that would provide a pathway to citizenshi­p for immigrants in the U.S. illegally, but plans for future migrants, including asylum cooperatio­n agreements that send Central Americans back to neighborin­g countries, are not clear.

 ?? Sandra Sebastian Associated Press ?? SOLDIERS were on patrol Saturday at the border crossing in El Florido, Guatemala, as members of a caravan of 7,500 Honduran migrants entered the country.
Sandra Sebastian Associated Press SOLDIERS were on patrol Saturday at the border crossing in El Florido, Guatemala, as members of a caravan of 7,500 Honduran migrants entered the country.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States