Caravan of hundreds of migrants press north across Mexico
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[October 27, 2021]
By Jose Torres and Lizbeth Diaz
HUIXTLA, Mexico (Reuters) - Hundreds of
migrants from Central America and the Caribbean trekked across Mexico on
Wednesday, the latest in a series of caravans that have sought to reach
the U.S. border in recent months.
The United States has registered record levels of migration this year,
with Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agents apprehending or
expelling more than 1.7 million migrants over the last 12 months.
The majority of the latest caravan members were families with young
children, according to a Reuters witness, who estimated that about 2,000
migrants were gathered on Tuesday in Huixtla in the southern Mexican
state of Chiapas to rest and receive medical attention before resuming
their journey north.
Among them was Arleth Chavez from Guatemala, who had walked with the
caravan for about 28 miles (45 km) since it departed the southern city
of Tapachula over the weekend.
"My feet are burning and in pain from the blisters," said Chavez. "I'll
make it as far as God permits."
Migrants have denounced the lengthy asylum process in Tapachula, located
near Mexico's southern border with Guatemala, and thousands have
departed the city in a series of caravans this year, including many
families from Haiti.
Some members of the most recent caravan aim to reach Mexico City, where
they hope the asylum process might be faster, while others aim to press
on to the U.S. border.
The U.S. government has put pressure on Mexico to contain migrants
before reaching the U.S. border.
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A migrant rests after receiving medical help as she and other
migrants from Haiti, South America and Central America in an area in
Huixtla before they continue with a caravan, heading to Mexico City
to apply for asylum and refugee status, in Huixtla, Mexico October
26, 2021. REUTERS/Jacob Garcia
Last week, Mexico's conference of Catholic bishops,
which operates about a hundred shelters across Mexico, urged the
country's authorities to end militarized immigration enforcement
efforts that, the group said, has caused an increase in human rights
violations against transiting migrants.
The caravan's slow movement across Mexico comes as U.S. President
Joe Biden has been facing increasing criticism from Republicans over
the current high levels of migration, which comes amid widespread
violence and growing hunger in Central America and parts of the
Caribbean.
On Tuesday, Republican Senate leader Mitch McConnell blasted Biden
for the "record-shattering" number of unlawful migrants detained
along the U.S.-Mexico border over the past year, laying blame on
what he described as an "intentionally unsecure border."
(Reporting by Jose Torres and Daniel Becerril in Tapachula;
Additional reporting by Lizbeth Diaz in Mexico City; Writing by
Laura Gottesdiener; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
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