After 2,000 miles they crossed the U.S.
border; then tragedy struck
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[November 15, 2018]
By Andrew Hay and Lucy Nicholson
TUCSON, Ariz./AGUACATE, Guatemala (Reuters)
- The 911 emergency call came in to the U.S. Border Patrol's Tucson
station around midnight.
Joselino Gomez Esteban's voice crackled through an older cell phone from
somewhere in Arizona's Sonoran Desert, the final stretch of a 2,000-mile
(3,218 km) migration from Guatemala.
Gomez said he was lost. He needed help. His nephew had collapsed,
wouldn't respond.
Each year hundreds of migrants die trying to cross into the United
States from Mexico. Thousands more need rescuing. The Border Patrol
tallied 294 deaths in fiscal year 2017, the last year for which data is
available. But experts believe the actual figure is far higher. Some who
die are never found.
A quarter of those known deaths - 72 people - came in the Tucson border
sector, where summer temperatures routinely hit triple digits. Between
October of 2017 and October of 2018, the Tucson Border Patrol launched
923 rescue operations, a 22 percent rise from a year before, according
to an agency official.
Finding Gomez, 43, and his nephew, Misael Paiz, 25, would prove
difficult. The cell phone Gomez used did not provide his GPS
coordinates. Using the cell phone towers that transmitted the 911
emergency call did little to help; the signal had bounced off towers up
to 100 miles (161 km) away.
Headquartered in a modern two-story brown brick building, the Tucson
Border Patrol sector is responsible for 262 miles (422 km) of sweeping
desert, canyons and cactus-studded hills. Gomez and Paiz could have been
anywhere in this territory. Agents were not even certain they were on
the U.S. side of the border.
The sector has a staff of 4,200 at its disposal, backed by helicopters
and unarmed drones, with technology ranging from motion and image
sensors to cameras able to spot migrants from seven miles (11 km) away.
It is one of the busiest sectors on the border for apprehensions and
rescues of illegal migrants as well as seizures of marijuana. More than
twice a day, on average, agents launch rescue missions.
At times, rescues turn to recovery efforts. Deaths come mostly from heat
stroke in summer, hypothermia in winter. The dead are taken to the Pima
County medical examiner's office.
“We see this day in and day out,” said Greg Hess, the county's chief
medical examiner.
Sometimes only bones are recovered; sometimes identifications are
impossible. When they can, the office arranges for the return of remains
to family members back home.
'SOON, IT WILL BE MY TURN'
Two weeks earlier, Gomez and Paiz had set off from Aguacate, a
struggling Guatemalan farming town of 1,500 people near the Mexican
border. The following account is based on more than two dozen interviews
with family members, government officials, border patrol agents and
human rights workers.
Paiz, a restaurant cook who had worked in Mexico, hoped to find work in
the United States and send money back home. His uncle, Gomez, planned to
join his wife and three children in South Carolina. He had been deported
two years earlier and tried and failed three times since to make it
back. This would be his fourth attempt.
"The family is disintegrating because here we don’t have work," said
Paiz's father, Miguel Domingo Paiz, 59.
Domingo knows that leaving for a better future is a life-or-death
gamble. His eldest son Ovidio was shot dead in Mexico last year after
moving there to find a job.
In recent years, the number of Guatemalans caught crossing illegally
into the United States has risen steadily from about 57,000 in 2015 to
nearly 117,000 in 2018, and is second only to apprehensions of Mexicans.
The figures, experts say, reflect a greater willingness among
Guatemalans to brave the perils of migration to escape rising violence,
poverty and political turmoil.
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Pallbearers carry the coffin of Misael Paiz, 25, to his funeral in
Aguacate, Huehuetenango, Guatemala, October 29, 2018. REUTERS/Lucy
Nicholson
Paiz told his twin brother, Gaspar, that he made an initial payment
of $500 to a smuggler - known as a "coyote" - who promised to get
him across the border. He would owe another $5,500 if he made it.
After making their way to the Mexican town of Sasabe on the border
with Arizona, Paiz and Gomez waited 12 days for their turn to cross
with a guide, according to family members.
In one of their last phone conversations, Paiz told his father:
"Soon it will be my turn."
PLEASE PRAY
After crossing and walking for about six hours, Paiz began to
complain of a severe headache. He collapsed next to a dirt track
called Cemetery Road.
Their guide poured water over Paiz's head. When that didn't help, he
took off with three other migrants in their group. Gomez stayed with
his nephew.
Gomez's efforts to revive his nephew failed. He called family
members in Aguacate, told Paiz's mother to pray. Then, knowing it
would mean another failed attempt to rejoin his family, Gomez placed
the 911 call.
At first light on Sept. 10, helicopters launched by U.S. Customs and
Border Protection and Pima County started scouring known migrant
paths in the area. An elite Border Patrol medical unit set out
across the desert.
Following the 911 dispatcher's instruction, Gomez lit a fire in the
hope that it could guide the rescuers. But it burned hot and clean,
producing little smoke.
It wasn't until 1:30 that afternoon that agents got word that a
rancher had happened across the two men.
A short while later, Border Patrol agents reached the location and
took Gomez into custody.
They took Paiz away in a black body bag.
A CONCRETE TOMB
The Pima County Medical Examiner would later determine Paiz
succumbed to heat stroke. Seven weeks after his death, Paiz's body
was flown to Guatemala City, a journey paid for by the Guatemalan
government. His coffin arrived along with a half dozen others, all
bearing remains of Guatemalan migrants.
A Red Cross ambulance transported Paiz's body on the 12-hour drive
along primitive roads from the capital to Aguacate. His family
followed behind in a bus.
"We always played together. We would go to the mountains together to
collect wood," said Gaspar, his twin. "We discussed which one of us
would go to the U.S. and decided it would be Misael."
In Aguacate, some 250 people met the ambulance transporting Paiz's
body. They stood in ankle-deep mud and pouring rain as eight men
lifted his coffin out and took it into the family home.
For hours, Paiz's mother, brothers and sisters wailed while others
sang in a room illuminated by a single electric bulb hanging from
the ceiling.
The following morning, a band played marimba music next to the
coffin in Paiz's family home. A woman cooked a pot of stew on a
wood-burning stove.
Paiz was buried that afternoon in a concrete tomb on a hillside,
next to his elder brother Ovidio.
(Reporting by Andrew Hay in Arizona and Lucy Nicholson in Guatemala;
additional reporting by Jane Ross in Arizona; Editing by Bill
Tarrant and Paul Thomasch)
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