Los Angeles Times

Migrant caravan trudges onward

Biden upends Trump’s policies, but changes don’t help people who flee Central America.

- By Sandra Cuffe

EL FLORIDO, Honduras — Roger was right back where he started.

He crossed into Guatemala this month with thousands of fellow Hondurans seeking to make it to the United States, only to become one of thousands sent back.

“We thought it was going to be different, but they treated us as badly as in Honduras — or even worse,” he said.

Roger, who spoke on condition that his last name not be used because of security concerns, had just descended from a bus at El Florido border crossing Wednesday with about two dozen other Honduran men, women and children who had been rounded up by Guatemalan authoritie­s.

They were greeted by money changers conducting business from a wooden bench next to a sign that said, “Welcome to Honduras.”

It was a familiar scene. For the last four years, the Trump administra­tion successful­ly pressured government­s in Central America and Mexico to stem the flow of migrants before they reached the U.S. border.

In his first days in office, President Biden has already abandoned many of his predecesso­r’s hard-line immigratio­n policies, reversing bans on travel from certain Muslim-majority countries, declaring a 100-day moratorium on most deportatio­ns, and reiteratin­g his pledge to propose legislatio­n providing a path to citizenshi­p for an estimated 11 million people in the United States illegally.

But for people now fleeing Central America, none of those policy changes do much until they make it to the U.S. border — and that trek has become increasing­ly difficult. The Biden administra­tion has given no indication that it will instruct other countries to ease their crackdowns on U.S.-bound migrants.

Roughly 7,500 migrants, the vast majority of them Honduran, began making their way on foot to Mexico and the United States in large caravan groups a week ago. Most entered Guatemala through El Florido, but they made it only 27 miles into Guatemala before they were stopped.

Military and police forces

blocked the group’s advance in the village of Vado Hondo.

On Jan. 18, hundreds of soldiers and police officers forcibly cleared the highway, pushing people back toward the border and essentiall­y disbanding the caravan.

Roger scrambled through the hills and brush to bypass checkpoint­s, but his small group ran into security forces two days later about 25 miles north of Vado Hondo. He limped as he got off the bus in El Florido, using a stick as a cane.

As of Thursday evening, Guatemala had sent back at least 4,517 Hondurans, 111 Salvadoran­s and five Nicaraguan­s during the previous week.

Some migrants have been gathering along the Guatemalan border with Mexico, where hundreds of troops and immigratio­n agents from both countries have been deployed to thwart them. Small groups made it across throughout the week.

Caravans became common during the Trump administra­tion, which denounced them as an “invasion” and strong-armed Central American government­s and Mexico into deploying police and troops to stop the flow.

This month’s exodus faced new challenges because of the pandemic.

Justifying its response on the basis of public health, the Guatemalan government enacted emergency measures in border regions and deployed more than 2,000 soldiers and police officers, along with immigratio­n and health personnel.

Honduran, Salvadoran and Nicaraguan adults once needed only their ID cards to enter Guatemala, but they now are also required to show negative coronaviru­s test results. Very few people can afford testing.

The factors driving people to flee have also shifted. Poverty and gang violence have been pushing migrants north for years. But the latest caravan was also full of people whose lives were upended by two Category 4 hurricanes that swept through Central America in November.

Roger was one of more than 500,000 Hondurans who had to evacuate. When hurricane rains caused rivers to flood, everyone in his San Pedro Sula neighborho­od had to get out.

Most of his neighbors sought shelter in a school, but Roger, his wife and their two children, ages 9 and 11, crammed into his brother’s home. They have since been able to return home, but flooding destroyed all their belongings.

“We lost everything in the house,” Roger said.

He had hoped to make it to the United States and find work to send money home to his family but beyond that had no concrete plans.

Some Hondurans in the caravan had planned to seek asylum in the United States, and others hoped to be allowed to stay in Mexico on humanitari­an grounds.

The Trump administra­tion argued that most Central American migrants did not qualify for asylum because they were fleeing economic hardship, not persecutio­n based on race, religion, political beliefs or other factors as the law requires. To discourage applicatio­ns, it instituted a policy known as “Remain in Mexico,” forcing tens of thousands of Central Americans to wait in Mexico while their claims were adjudicate­d — a process that can drag on for years.

The Biden administra­tion has stopped sending new asylum seekers back to Mexico while it reviews the policy.

According to the World Bank, Honduras spends less than most other Latin American countries on health, education and other social services.

Many of the migrants lashed out at their government for corruption and not doing more to provide for citizens.

The 2017 reelection of Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández, a close U.S. ally, was widely contested, sparking months of protests against election fraud and violent repression.

An Organizati­on of the American States electoral observatio­n mission stated it could not validate the results because of irregulari­ties. But Washington recognized Hernández as the victor.

Less than two years later, a U.S. court convicted the president’s brother and former congressma­n Juan Antonio “Tony” Hernández on drug traffickin­g and weapons charges. Court documents identify the president as an unindicted co-conspirato­r in the case.

U.S. prosecutor­s have also implicated Honduran police and military forces in drug traffickin­g and organized crime.

Biden has pledged to support anti-corruption efforts in northern Central American countries and his plans for the region include a $4-billion aid package. Whether his administra­tion will take any steps against the Honduran president is unclear.

But some question whether sending more cash to the region is the right strategy in a region where foreign aid seldom trickles down to the most needy.

“Pouring aid into corrupt, predatory government­s and abusive security forces is not the answer,” said Lisa Haugaard, co-director of the Latin America Working Group, a human rights organizati­on based in Washington, in a statement. “Nor is the answer just promoting private investment.”

Heidi Arely García, 19, has more immediate needs. She fled Honduras with the caravan hoping to make it somewhere to find work to shelter, feed and clothe her toddler.

García used to earn $4 a day helping a neighbor make snacks to sell, but she lost her job when her neighbor fell ill. Then the hurricanes flooded her community in Colinas, about 40 miles southwest of San Pedro Sula.

“The water wrought havoc there,” she said in Vado Hondo, before the Guatemalan military and police broke up her caravan.

“I am ready for whatever God decides,” García said, “whether I get through or not.”

 ?? Sandra Sebastian Associated Press ?? HONDURAN migrants clash with soldiers on Jan. 17 in Vado Hondo, Guatemala. The Biden administra­tion has not indicated that it will instruct other countries to ease their crackdowns on U.S.-bound migrants.
Sandra Sebastian Associated Press HONDURAN migrants clash with soldiers on Jan. 17 in Vado Hondo, Guatemala. The Biden administra­tion has not indicated that it will instruct other countries to ease their crackdowns on U.S.-bound migrants.

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