Weary Central American migrants still far from reaching US border

Published October 24, 2018
Central American migrants travelling with a caravan to the US rest in a park on Tuesday. — AP
Central American migrants travelling with a caravan to the US rest in a park on Tuesday. — AP

HUIXTLA: Thousands of Central American migrants awoke on Tuesday in a makeshift encampment in a rain-soaked town square in far-southern Mexico, some weary, foot-sore and coughing, still distant from their goal of reaching the US border.

The caravan, estimated to include more than 7,000 people, had advanced about 75kms since crossing the border from Guatemala, and still faced more than 1,000 miles, and likely much further, to the end of the journey.

But as the sun rose, a chorus of coughs arose from the shapeless forms wrapped in blankets and bits of plastic sheeting.

Burned by the relentless heat and the night’s chill, eating badly and sleeping rough, many appeared to be developing respiratory symptoms.

Forty-eight-year-old Edwin Enrique Jimenez Flores of Tela, Honduras had one of those persistent coughs, but still vowed to reach the US to seek work.

“I feel strong. My feet are good,” he said.

But Marlon Anibal Castellanos, a 27-year-old former bus driver from San Pedro Sula was finding the journey difficult as he prepared to rest Monday night. He was travelling with his wife as well as his nine-year-old daughter and six-year-old son.

“It’s difficult to travel with children,” he said. “Today we walked six hours” before finally paying 25 pesos about $1.30 from their thin savings to a passing van driver who took then the rest of the way to Huixtla.

“It’s dangerous. There are no ambulances and if the children pass out, they could die because there is no [medical] help.”

Another hazard trucks crowded with hitch-hiking migrants claimed one victim on Monday when a man fell from the back of a truck and died.

The marchers set up a simple memorial to the man overnight, setting out a dozen small candles arranged in the shape of a cross that were kept lit through the darkness.

An activist aiding the marchers, Irineo Mujica of the People Without Borders group, said they would pause and rest on Tuesday in honor of the man who died.

“Today we won’t move. Today is a day of mourning,” he said, though many people throughout the exodus have joined and split away on their own.

He said they would leave before dawn on Wednesday to reach Mapastepec about 38 miles up the coast.

Huixtla municipal worker Daniel Lopez said the leftist-governed town was offering some food, water and portable bathrooms to the migrants as well as simple painkillers and goods such as rehydration liquids. But he said some children are running high temperatures.

A smaller caravan earlier this year headed for the distant Tijuana-San Diego crossing, dissipating as it advanced.

Only a fraction about 200 of the 1,200 in the group reached the California border.

The same could well happen this time around as some turn back, splinter off on their own or decide to take their chances on asylum in Mexico as 1,128 have done so far, according to the country’s Interior Department.

Adrian Edwards, a spokesman for the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, said on Tuesday in Geneva that “in any situation like this it is essential that people have the chance to request asylum and have their international protection needs properly assessed, before any decision on return [or] deportation is made.”

While such caravans have occurred semi-regularly over the years, this one has become a hot topic ahead of the Nov 6 midterm elections in the US, and an immigrant rights activist traveling with the group accused Trump of using it to stir up his Republican base.

By all appearances the march began as a group of about 160 who decided to band together in Honduras for protection against the criminal gangs who prey on migrants travelling alone and snowballed as the group moved north.

A team of AP journalists traveling with the caravan for more than a week has spoken with Hondurans, Guatemalans and Salvadorans, but has not met any Middle Easterners, who Trump suggested were “mixed in” with the Central American migrants.

Published in Dawn, October 24th, 2018

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