Two
groups of Central American migrants made separate marches on the U.S. Consulate
in Tijuana Tuesday, demanding that they be processed through the asylum system
more quickly and in greater numbers, that deportations be halted and that President Trump either
let them into the country or pay them $50,000 each to go home.
On the one-month anniversary of their arrival
into Tijuana, caravan members are pressing the United States to take action but
they are dwindling in numbers since more than 6,000 first arrived to the city’s
shelters.
Approximately 700 have voluntarily returned to
their country of origin, 300 have been deported, and 2,500 have applied for
humanitarian visas in Mexico, according to Xochtil Castillo, a caravan member
who met with Mexican officials Tuesday. The group of unaccounted migrants,
about 3,500 are presumed to have either crossed illegally into the United
States, moved to other Mexican border cities, or simply fallen through the
cracks.
Mexico’s National Institution of Migration did
not respond to a request to verify those numbers Tuesday.
The first group demanding action, numbering about 100, arrived
at the U.S. Consulate at about 11 am Tuesday. The migrants said they were
asking that the Trump Administration pay them $50,000 each or allow them into
the U.S.
When asked how the group came up with the
$50,000 figure, organizer Alfonso Guerrero Ulloa of Honduras, said they chose
that number as a group.
“It may seem like a lot of money to you,”
Ulloa said. “But it is a small sum compared to everything the United States has
stolen from Honduras.”
The group’s letter criticized American
intervention in Central America. They gave the U.S. Consulate 72 hours to
respond. They said they had not decided what to do if their demands were not
met.
“I don’t know, we will decide as a group,”
Ulloa said.
The second letter, delivered around 1:20 p.m.,
came from a separate group of caravan members asking for the U.S. to speed up
the asylum process. Specifically, the group asked U.S. immigration officials to
admit up to 300 asylum seekers at the San Ysidro Port of Entry each day.
Currently, officials admit between 40 and 100
asylum seekers. The group of migrants say the slow pace violates American and
international laws that call for an immediate process, and places vulnerable
migrants at risk.
“In the meantime, families, women and children
who have fled our countries continue to suffer and the civil society of Tijuana
continue to be forces to confront this humanitarian crisis, a refugee crisis
caused in great part by decades of U.S. intervention in Central America,” the
letter states.
The second letter came from a group of about
50 migrants, including about 15 who participated in a hunger strike that also
demanded a swifter U.S. asylum process. The non-profit Pueblo Sin Fronteras
helped organize the delivery of the second letter.
Representatives from the second group met with
Mexican immigration officials in Tijuana. The migrants asked Mexican officials
to stop working with the municipal police in deporting caravan members.
Migrants thought the number of deportations
and voluntary repatriations is a reflection of their precarious situation in
Tijuana.
“A lot of people are leaving because there is
no solution here,” said Douglas Matute, 38, of Tijuana. “We thought they would
let us in. But Trump sent the military instead of social workers.”
The two groups were unaware of each other’s
demands. But both said their messages were well received by the staff of the
U.S. Consulate in Tijuana.
“They gave us a warm welcome,” Castillo said.
“They were very kind. She said she’d send the letter to the recipients.”
The letter asking for a speedier U.S. asylum
process was addressed to President Trump, Department of Homeland Security
Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen, San Ysidro Port Director Sidney Aki, and
Commissioner of the Office of Customs and Border Protection Kevin McAleenan.
Castillo said she was not given a timeframe of
when the U.S. will respond.
Trump has threatened to cut off financial aid
to Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador if those countries did not stop the
caravan before it reached the U.S. border. He has reiterated, as late as
Tuesday, the need for a border wall, threatening to shut down the U.S.
government if funding was not approved.
Getting into the U.S. Consulate was somewhat
of a victory, the caravan groups said.
“They received us at least,” Ulloa said. “It
was nice to be treated with respect.”
The letter said the group is made up of,
“families, women and children, the majority of which are young men who are
fleeing from poverty, insecurity and political repression under the
dictatorship of Juan Orlando Hernandez.”
Orlando Hernandez is the president of
Honduras. Their letter also asked the U.S. to remove Orlando Hernandez from
office.
Getting $55,000 for each of the caravan
members, Ulloa said, might allow them to go back home and start a small
business.
Ulloa claims he was falsely accused of
attacking a Chinese restaurant in Honduras in 1987. He has been living outside
Honduras for 30 years, according to an online petition he wrote asking the U.S.
government to exonerate him.
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