WhatsApp instructions, Mexican struggles: How Haitians ended up in Texas
camp
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[September 18, 2021]
By Alexandra Ulmer
CIUDAD ACUÑA, Mexico (Reuters) - Haitians
camped out under a Texas bridge followed instructions circulated on
WhatsApp to get there, according to a dozen migrants who said the tips
delivered to their phones helped them evade checks by Mexican
authorities.
Over 10,000 migrants, most of them Haitians, were as of Friday sleeping
on the ground in a squalid camp under the Del Rio International Bridge
connecting Ciudad Acuña, Mexico to Del Rio, Texas, hoping to apply for
U.S. asylum.
The camp's quick growth - at least 2,000 people arrived on Thursday
alone - has sparked questions about why groups were converging on Del
Rio specifically.
In interviews, Haitians spoke of starting their journeys where they had
been living under difficult conditions for some time in South America.
They showed Reuters several guides they had been following on their
phones - some just lists of Mexican towns and others detailed
instructions on what buses to take - that all culminated by the Rio
Grande in Del Rio, Texas.
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James Pierre, 28, shared a WhatsApp list of 15 stops through Mexico -
starting in Huixtla, Chiapas, and ending in Ciudad Acuña - that he said
was circulating among Haitian migrants.
"Those ahead sent directions by phone. I helped people coming behind
me," Pierre said. Still, he said he got lost for days in the mountains
and survived on little but water and fruit.
One image shared by a migrant who arrived on Friday included detailed
instructions on bus routes through Mexico, including which terminals to
get off and where to buy tickets. Several other Haitians also reported
receiving the same instructions.
The instructions said: "These are the routes for which you will not be
asked for any paperwork when buying travel tickets."
Groups of Haitians and other migrants who were frustrated with a long
wait for travel documents tried to leave southern Mexico in caravans
weeks ago.
Those groups were broken up by security forces that in some cases
deployed excessive violence. One video widely circulated on social media
showed Mexican immigration agents knocking to the ground and repeatedly
stamping on a migrant. The two agents have since been suspended.
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Migrants seeking asylum in the U.S. walk in the Rio Grande river
near the International Bridge between Mexico and the U.S. as they
wait to be processed, in Ciudad Acuna, Mexico, September 17, 2021.
Migrants cross back and forth into Mexico to buy food and supplies.
REUTERS/Go Nakamura
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U.S. border officials have been struggling with a
growing number of migrant crossings. They have reached 20-year-highs
along the U.S.-Mexico border, topping 195,000 encounters in August.
LEAVING SOUTH AMERICA
Many of the Haitians interviewed by Reuters said they used to live
in South America, often Brazil or Chile, but decided to move on
because they could not attain legal status there or struggled to
secure decent jobs. Some Haitians also said they were encouraged by
videos they saw on social media about obtaining asylum in the United
States.
Their Caribbean homeland long has been plagued by economic and
political instability and repeated natural disasters. Most recently,
Haiti's president was assassinated in July and in August the country
was battered by both a 7.2 magnitude earthquake and a powerful
storm.
Haitian Alexandro Petitfrere, 30, said that when he left a difficult
life as a construction worker in Brazil last July, he hoped Mexico
might prove a better home.
But Petitfrere said police officers robbed $100 from him as he was
crossing into Tapachula, in the south of the country, in August.
Reuters was not able to confirm his allegation.
He said he then had to sleep in queues to get a permit to stay in
the area, could not find work, struggled to afford accommodation and
said there was rampant discrimination against Haitians.
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"If Mexico had given me an opportunity, I would have stayed. But
because they mistreated us, I decided to come here," Petitfrere
said.
(Reporting by Alexandra Ulmer, Editing by Donna Bryson and Rosalba
O'Brien)
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