Hundreds of Central American migrants bedded down overnight on a bridge separating Guatemala and Mexico, and many squeezed against a metal border gate as efforts to halt a trek north by a caravan of thousands of people gathered pace under US pressure.
US President Donald Trump has said the Central American caravan must be stopped before it reaches the US, and Honduras and Guatemala late on Friday said they were mobilizing to return Honduran migrants to their homeland.
Earlier in the day, hundreds of migrants at the head of the caravan had poured through Guatemalan border posts and onto the bridge, but were repelled by dozens of shield-bearing Mexican police. Several said they had been teargassed.
Photo: Reuters
Drained from days of walking and frustrated, many prepared to spend the night in the open.
Mexico’s government, which said it would process migrants’ claims for asylum individually, vowed to tackle the caravan as US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo met top officials in Mexico City.
Pompeo urged Mexico to ensure that the procession did not reach the US.
Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernandez was due to meet Guatemalan President Jimmy Morales in Guatemala yesterday to implement a strategy for returning the Honduran migrants, their two governments said.
Most of the migrants that reporters spoke to said they had no idea how to get the documentation needed for Mexico, but many were determined to try.
“No, I’ll fight. I’ll try again,” Honduran Hilda Rosa said as her four teenage children sat upright, beaming as she pumped the air with her fist.
The native of Tegucigalpa told a familiar tale when asked why she had left Honduras: “You know why: No work, violence.”
Most of the people now caught trying to enter the US illegally hail from Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala, among the poorest and most violent countries in the Americas.
A few of the caravan members, who ranged from farmers and bakers to housewives and students, and included a whole block of friends and family from the Honduran city of El Progreso, said they would start going back to where they came from yesterday.
Jose Ramon Rodriguez, 45, a construction worker from El Progreso, sat on the Guatemalan end of the bridge with his head hanging low, his nine-year-old son tucked against him.
“Tomorrow we go home,” he said, as his companions nodded.
Among them was Osman Melgar, who nursed a bleeding gash on his shin, suffered when he fell as dozens of people packed on the bridge began fleeing when police used tear gas, several eyewitnesses said.
Some, including 40-year-old Adriana Consuelo, went under the bridge, paying people 25 pesos (US$1.30) to ferry them across the Suchiate River on vessels made of giant rubber tires.
After making it to the muddy banks of Mexico, she said: “No one checked my documents,” as she headed to a taco restaurant.
However, Mexico had stepped up its efforts to stop the flow of people, migration experts said.
“Every time there’s a [migrant] caravan there are police sent to the southern border ... but we’ve never seen anything as dramatic as we’re seeing today,” said Eunice Rendon, coordinator of migrant advocacy group Agenda Migrante. “This has everything to do with Trump.”
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