Current:Home > MarketsMigrant caravan regroups in Mexico after government promise of papers falls through -消息
Migrant caravan regroups in Mexico after government promise of papers falls through
View
Date:2025-04-16 20:20:48
ARRIAGA, Mexico (AP) — A caravan of about 2,000 migrants on Monday resumed their journey through southern Mexico, after participants were left without the papers the Mexican government appeared to have promised.
The original caravan of about 6,000 migrants from Venezuela, Cuba and Central America had started walking on Christmas Eve. But after New Year’s Day, the government persuaded them to give up their march, promising they would get some kind of unspecified documents.
The migrants were seeking transit or exit visas that might allow them to take buses or trains to the U.S. border. But they were given papers that don’t allow them to leave the southern state of Chiapas, on the Guatemalan border.
Migrants set out walking Monday from the railway town of Arriaga, near the border with Oaxaca state, about 150 miles (245 kilometers) from Tapachula, where they started the original caravan on Dec. 24.
Salvadoran migrant Rosa Vázquez said Mexican immigration officials provided shelter in the town of Huixtla, Chiapas, and offered her papers that would have allowed her to remain in the state.
But work is scarce there and local residents are also largely impoverished.
“Immigration lied to us, they made promises they did not live up to,” said Vázquez. “They just wanted to break up the group, but they were wrong, because we’re all here and we’re going to start walking.”
Coritza Matamoros, a migrant from Honduras, was also taken to a local shelter along with her husband and two children, even though she thought she was being sent to Mexico City.
“They really tricked us, they made us believe we were being taken to Mexico City,” said Matamoros. “They made us sign documents.”
For the moment, the caravan hopes to make it to a town further up the road in Oaxaca.
Mexico has in the past let migrants go through, trusting that they would tire themselves out walking along the highway. No migrant caravan has ever walked the 1,000 miles (1,600 kilometers) to the U.S. border.
U.S. officials in December discussed ways Mexico could help stem the flow of migrants at a meeting with Mexico’s president Andrés Manuel López Obrador.
López Obrador has confirmed that U.S. officials want Mexico to do more to block migrants at its southern border with Guatemala, or make it more difficult for them to move across Mexico by train or in trucks or buses — a policy known as “contention.”
The Mexican government felt pressure to address that problem, after U.S. officials briefly closed two vital Texas railway border crossings, claiming they were overwhelmed by processing migrants.
That put a chokehold on freight moving from Mexico to the U.S., as well as grain needed to feed Mexican livestock moving south. The rail crossings have since been reopened, but the message appeared clear.
The migrants on the caravan included single adults but also entire families, all eager to reach the U.S. border, angry and frustrated at having to wait weeks or months in the nearby city of Tapachula for documents that might allow them to continue their journey.
Mexico says it detected 680,000 migrants moving through the country in the first 11 months of 2023.
In May, Mexico agreed to take in migrants from countries such as Venezuela, Nicaragua and Cuba who had been turned away by the U.S. for not following rules that provided new legal pathways to asylum and other forms of migration.
But that deal, aimed at curbing a post-pandemic jump in migration, appears to be insufficient as numbers rise once again, disrupting bilateral trade and stoking anti-immigrant sentiment.
____
Follow AP’s coverage of Latin America and the Caribbean at https://apnews.com/hub/latin-america
veryGood! (264)
Related
- The Grammy nominee you need to hear: Esperanza Spalding
- A new Biden proposal would make changes to Advantage plans for Medicare: What to know
- Israel-Hamas war crowds crisis-heavy global agenda as Blinken, G7 foreign ministers meet in Japan
- 8 simple things you can do to protect yourself from getting scammed
- Man can't find second winning lottery ticket, sues over $394 million jackpot, lawsuit says
- Protests turn ugly as pressure mounts on Spain’s acting government for amnesty talks with Catalans
- Supreme Court to hear arguments in gun case over 1994 law protecting domestic violence victims
- EU envoy in surprise visit to Kosovo to push for further steps in normalization talks with Serbia
- Pregnant Kylie Kelce Shares Hilarious Question Her Daughter Asked Jason Kelce Amid Rising Fame
- The ballot issues for Election Day 2023 with the highest stakes across U.S. voting
Ranking
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Likely human skull found in Halloween section of Florida thrift store
- Election might not settle Connecticut mayor’s race upended by video of ballot box stuffing
- Kenya declares a surprise public holiday for a national campaign to plant 15 billion trees
- Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
- The Air Force asks Congress to protect its nuclear launch sites from encroaching wind turbines
- The ballot issues for Election Day 2023 with the highest stakes across U.S. voting
- Media watchdog asks Pakistan not to deport 200 Afghan journalists in undocumented migrant crackdown
Recommendation
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
These 20 Gifts for Music Fans and Musicians Hit All the Right Notes
Live updates | Netanyahu says Israel will have ‘overall security responsibility’ in Gaza after war
I think Paramount+ ruined 'Frasier' with the reboot, but many fans disagree. Who's right?
Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
Protesters calling for Gaza cease-fire block road at Tacoma port while military cargo ship docks
Megan Fox Describes Abusive Relationship in Gut-Wrenching Book of Poems
5 Things podcast: How can we cultivate happiness in our lives?