Migrant caravan appears to be moving northward faster, as crowds take advantage of free ride
29
October, 2018
Migrants
in the leading caravan trying to make its way to the United States
appear to be approaching the border at a faster pace now, as the
group takes advantage of rides being offered by trucks and other
vehicles.
A
Fox News crew traveling with the caravan observed a group of migrants
in Tepanatepec climbing up the sides of a tall red truck Monday
morning after it pulled into an area where the city’s mayor and
volunteers were distributing food.
"The
trucks come up, and they queue up...this is how they are mostly
moving,” Fox News' Griff Jenkins said on-air. “Now, they do walk,
but it is very exhausting."
One
of the migrants gave a thumbs-up and a smile to a Fox News
cameraperson before boarding the truck. The migrants are trying to
make their way to Mexico City and then the U.S., despite repeated
warnings from President Trump that they will not be allowed across
the border.
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There
are currently three migrant caravans trying to make their way to
America. The first caravan, which has included as many as 7,200
people and is currently approximately 1,000 miles from the closest
border crossing with the U.S., entered Mexico from Guatemala around
Oct. 20.
During
its first three days in Mexico, that caravan traveled about 50 miles.
Over the past six days though, the pace has picked up, and the group
has covered more than 150 miles with the help of free rides given by
vehicles and trucks like the one observed this morning.
The
caravan behind it, which is smaller in size, has been accused of
violently attacking Mexican police and immigration agents with rocks
and glass bottles along Mexico’s border with Guatemala.
Interior
Secretary Alfonso Navarrete Prida made those accusations late Sunday
while simultaneously denying his country’s forces were responsible
for the death of a 26-year-old Honduran who Guatemalan officials say
was struck by a rubber bullet earlier that day.
The
death came as several hundred migrants in the town of Tecun Uman –
where the leading caravan passed through more than a week ago –
broke through border barriers and clashed with Mexican authorities
who were determined not to let the caravan grow or be repeated,
according to the Associated Press.
Guatemalan
firefighters told the AP the Honduran was killed there Sunday by a
rubber bullet that hit his head – but as of Monday the source of
the bullet was in dispute. The exact circumstances of the death were
also unclear.
Prida,
in a news conference last night, claimed Mexican federal police and
immigration agents were pelted with rocks, glass bottles and
fireworks as the migrants broke through a gate on the Mexican side of
the border. He added that none of the officers were armed with
firearms or anything that could shoot rubber bullets, and further
claimed some of the attackers were carrying guns and firebombs.
"Mexico
does not criminalize undocumented immigration," Prida said.
Central
American migrants try to force their way through a customs gate at
the border bridge connecting Guatemala and Mexico, in Tecun Uman.
Central
American migrants try to force their way through a customs gate at
the border bridge connecting Guatemala and Mexico, in Tecun Uman.
Also
on Sunday, about 300 people departed from San Salvador – the
capital of El Salvador – forming the third caravan of people hoping
to make their way to the U.S., the Associated Press reported.
Most
of the migrants in the caravans appear determined to reach the U.S.
despite offers of refuge in Mexico.
Mexican
President Enrique Pena Nieto launched a program Friday dubbed "You
are home," which promises shelter, medical attention, schooling
and jobs to Central Americans who agree to stay in the southern
Mexico states of Chiapas or Oaxaca, far from the U.S. border.
Mexico's
interior minister said Sunday that temporary identity numbers had
been issued to more than 300 migrants, which would allow them to stay
and work in Mexico. The ministry said pregnant women, children and
the elderly were among those who had joined the program and were now
being attended at shelters. He added that 1,895 had applied for
refugee status in Mexico.
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