Mother, wife of drowned Salvadoran
migrants awaits their repatriation
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[June 29, 2019]
By Nelson Renteria
SAN LUIS TALPA, El Salvador (Reuters) -
Days after she lost her small daughter and husband to the treacherous
currents of the Rio Grande, Tania Vanessa Avalos, 23, arrived back in El
Salvador to await her family's return -- in coffins.
Oscar Martinez, 25, and, Angie Valeria, just shy of 2 years old, died on
June 23 as they were attempting to cross the river between Mexico and
the United States.
A photo of the two drowned migrants caught them face-down in the reeds
of the river's trash-strewn shore. The little girl, in red tights
swollen by a water-logged diaper, is entwined in her father's T-shirt, a
small arm stretched across his neck as if in a final embrace.
Martinez had apparently pulled his T-shirt over his daughter to
improvise a baby carrier.
The lacerating image spread virally, and became a lightning rod in the
charged U.S. political discussion of President Donald Trump's hard-line
policies against asylum seekers and other migrants.
Democratic Party candidates for president brought it up in their first
debate on Wednesday.
Avalos, who escaped the strong current that dragged her family down,
returned home to bury them. The bodies are due to arrive on Sunday after
repatriation by land from Mexico, the Salvadoran government said.
Avalos declined to speak to the media after arriving in El Salvador,
accompanied by Vice Minister for Foreign Affairs Mauricio Cabrera.
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Tania Avalos, wife of Oscar Alberto Martinez Ramirez, a
migrant who drowned in the Rio Grande river with his
daughter Valeria during their journey to the U.S., attends a
news conference as she arrives at Monsenor Oscar Arnulfo
Romero International Airport in San Luis Talpa, El Salvador,
June 28, 2019. REUTERS/Jose Cabezas
Cabrera urged Salvadorans not to undertake the perilous trip to the
United States without documents.
"Do not jeopardize your lives and those of your children," Cabrera
said. "Do not trust people traffickers who only seek their own
profit and who often fail to fulfill the promises they make."
The United Nations refugee agency, UNHCR, compared the photo to that
of a three-year-old Syrian boy, Aylan Kurdi, who drowned in the
Mediterranean Sea and whose body washed ashore on a beach in Turkey
in 2015.
That image also sparked a public outcry about the desperate plight
of asylum-seekers and the political challenges of welcoming them to
safer shores.
(Reporting by Nelson Renteria; Writing by Delphine Schrank; Editing
by Richard Borsuk)
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