Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Migrants break through border

The U.S. bound caravan came through Guatemalam­exico fence

- Los Angeles Times (TNS)

CIUDAD HIDALGO, Mexico – Thousands of Central Americans in a U.s.bound migrant caravan began pushing their way from Guatemala into Mexico on Friday, pulling down border fences and storming toward the Mexican immigratio­n post.

“One way or another, we will pass!” the migrants chanted as they approached the gates in the Guatemalan town of Tecun Uman.

The migrants rushed past Guatemalan soldiers onto a bridge that crosses the muddy Suchiate River, which separates the two counties.

But Mexican police in riot gear, at one point using tear gas to keep the crowd at bay, appeared to have stopped the group, which originated in Honduras last week, from bypassing immigratio­n controls and illegally advancing further into Mexican territory.

The caravan of more than 2,000 people – men and women, teenagers and infants – on foot and in vehicles has become politicall­y explosive. President Donald Trump has made it an issue in the midterm election and threatened to cut aid to Central American nations, close the U.s.-mexico border and deploy troops there if Mexico failed to stop the migrants.

At a campaign stop in Arizona on Friday, Trump expressed gratitude to Mexican officials for their efforts to deter the caravan. “It’s being stopped as of this moment by Mexico. So we appreciate very much what Mexico is doing,” he told reporters in Scottsdale. “As of this moment, I thank Mexico. I hope they continue.”

As they neared the Mexican side of the bridge, the migrants clashed with Mexican authoritie­s, and several people were injured – including migrants, police Mike Pompeo, U.S Secretary of State, left, and Luis Videgaray Caso, Mexico’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, during a news conference on Friday in Mexico City.

and at least one Mexican journalist.

While a Mexican federal police helicopter hovered overhead, hundreds of migrants remained massed on the bridge, demanding that they be allowed to cross.

Migrants gathered outside the Mexican immigratio­n headquarte­rs shouted “Ayuda!” for help, as some women in the group appeared to be fainting in the sweltering heat.

The Mexican government brought a large bus to the crossing, and a small number of migrants, mostly women and children, were allowed to board. It appears they were to be processed for refugee status or other potential protection­s.

Mexican authoritie­s, who have also sought help from the United Nations, said each migrant would be

subjected to immigratio­n inspection and that those lacking legal papers to be in Mexico would be detained and deported. Those seeking asylum would be evaluated on a case-by-case basis.

Many shops here in Ciudad Hidalgo, on the Mexican side of the border, were closed because of fears of violence and looting. But residents of the town lined up to watch the spectacle.

As the day wore on, migrants began jumping from the bridge and swimming to the Mexican side or climbing aboard makeshift rafts, which ferried them to shore.

Darling Mejia, 20, had been waiting on the bridge for two hours before he began to worry that he might suffocate and decided to jump.

LONDON – More than half a million people from across the United Kingdom gathered Saturday in London for a protest march opposing the nation’s pending departure from the European Union.

The march, which organizers said drew more than 600,000 people to west London’s Park Lane, was called by People’s Vote, a group campaignin­g for the public to have a say on a final Brexit deal to prevent the ruling Conservati­ve government from forcing it through Parliament.

A meeting of European Union leaders in Brussels this week, at which an agreement was to have been struck, instead ended with major

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