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Mexican authorities clear makeshift migrant camp near US border

Mexico City, Mexico
Reuters

Mexican authorities on Sunday cleared a makeshift camp in the north of the country where hundreds of migrants heading towards the US border had been holding out for more than a year in what rights organisations criticised as deplorable conditions.

Nearly 400 migrants have been transferred by bus to three different shelters near the border city of Tijuana, where they can remain “indefinitely,” said the city’s Mayor Montserrat Caballero.

Mexico migrants moved

Migrants carry their belongings to a bus after Mexican authorities cleared a makeshift camp, where hundreds of migrants heading towards the US border were staying, at the El Chaparral border crossing in Tijuana, Mexico, on 6th February. PICTURE: Reuters/Jorge Duenes.

Caballero promised help for those migrants regardless of whether they want to stay in Tijuana or return to their countries of origin.

“We’re going to pay for the transfers and, if they want to wait for their ‘American dream,’ we’re also going to support them while they wait,” said Caballero.

Dozens of security personnel, including soldiers from the national guard, were seen dissolving the makeshift camp, fenced by metal mesh, in videos shared on social media. 

Families, including parents with small children, were seen packing up their belongings. There were no reports of violence.

Caballero said the troops were not armed and that migrants collected their belongings and boarded buses voluntarily because they had previously been notified they would be transferred.

But one Guatemalan mother, who had arrived in Tijuana a year ago, and requested anonymity, said she felt migrants had little choice but to follow orders.



On Saturday, Mexico’s National Human Rights Commission (CNDH) urged immigration authorities to speed up the processes that would help nearly 2,000 migrants at the southern border get documents to regularize their stay in Mexico or let them travel through the country without being detained.

Tens of thousands of migrants flee their home countries each year in an attempt to reach the United States, but many of them also seek refuge and protection in Mexico.

Migrants, including minors, currently survive “in conditions contrary to respect for their dignity” in the southern city of Tapachula, near the Guatemala border, the commission said in a statement. The National Migration Institute (INM) and the Commission for Refugee Assistance (COMAR) urgently need to provide humanitarian assistance to these migrants, it said.

“The INM and COMAR have been asked to immediately create working groups in order to speed up the migratory regularization procedures, or the recognition of refugee status,” it said. 

The INM also should guarantee “the free transit through national territory of people once the corresponding identification documents have been issued.”

Amid pressure from Washington, Mexico has tried to stem large waves of migrants traveling in US-bound caravans. 

Tens of thousands of migrants flee their home countries each year in an attempt to reach the United States, but many of them also seek refuge and protection in Mexico.

 

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