Tuesday, May 7, 2024

Another migrants’ caravan left Honduras on Sunday bound for Texas

A second caravan of migrants left Honduras on Sunday with plans to travel through Chiapas, Oaxaca, Veracruz and Tamaulipas to reach the border city of McAllen, Texas.

The Honduran ambassador to Mexico revealed the information in an interview today with broadcaster Grupo Fórmula, in which he also countered claims by United States President Trump that “criminals and unknown Middle Easterners” were among members of the first caravan, now traveling northward through Chiapas.

Alden Rivera Montes said the migrants “are not maras [members of the Mara Salvatrucha, or MS-13 gang], they are not criminals. They are citizens who struggle for a better life and having reached a certain level of frustration over not having social mobility decided to begin the migration.”

Most decided to leave everything behind and migrate from the northern triangle region of Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador, either to look for better job opportunities, flee violence or reunite with relatives, the ambassador said.

He also suggested that a Honduran political party was behind the organization of the caravan, alleging that “with deceptions and lies [the migrants] were told they would get transit visas in Mexico, and that the United States was waiting for them. Our people were misled . . . .”

The second caravan, now traveling through Guatemala, numbers almost 1,000, according to a source in the Guatemala police.

Source: El Financiero (sp), Milenio (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
People on top of a freight train

Thousands of migrants spent nearly a week stranded in Zacatecas

0
The migrants faced grueling conditions when the freight trains they were riding stopped in Zacatecas and temperatures soared above 30 C.
Residents shared photos of the Velo de Novia fire near Valle de Bravo burning late Sunday night.

Valle de Bravo wildfire now 60% contained, AMLO says

0
The president said that the local population is not at risk, though some residents and tourists have been moved to safe zones.
Australian brothers Callum and Jake Robinson and American Jack Carter Rhoad were killed while on a surfing and camping trip in Baja California last week

Missing tourists’ bodies identified in Ensenada; surfers pay tribute and demand safety

2
Three people were arrested in connection with the murders of Australian brothers Callum and Jake Robinson and U.S. citizen Jack Carter Rhoad.