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U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers stand in the vehicle lanes during a show of force and exercise to secure the San Ysidro Port of Entry Nov. 22 in San Diego. Several hundred officers as well as military personnel were seen participating in the exercise, which had the border crossing closed for about 30 minutes. The show of force and exercise was in response to the presence of a large caravan of mainly Honduran migrants that recently arrived in neighboring Tijuana, Mexico. (CNS photo/David Maung)  

MEXICO CITY (CNS) -- The chaotic scene in Tijuana Nov. 25 -- when migrants, including women and children, were repelled from the U.S. border with tear gas -- prompted the closure of one of the world's busiest border crossings. It also showed the increasing impatience and despair of thousands of caravan participants, who could spend months in an uncomfortable camp as they wait to present asylum claims to U.S. officials.

And while some Catholic migrant advocates criticized U.S. reaction as excessive, some who work with migrants through a network of shelters stretching the length of the country said they tried warning the caravan participants and a migrant advocacy group accompanying it, Pueblo Sin Fronteras, that -- unlike past years, when smaller caravans would cross Mexico -- times had changed. Resources for sustaining thousands of migrants in Tijuana are stretched thin and the current U.S. government has showed few signs of speeding up the process for accepting asylum applications.

Press reports from Tijuana described a peaceful protest, in which the migrants planned to present their case: that they had come only to work and save their own lives. But the protest was met by a wall of Mexican police officers, prompting the migrants to detour the barricade and head to a train border crossing.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection said in a tweet that some migrants "threw projectiles." In response, "Border Patrol agents deployed tear gas to dispel the group because of the risk to agents' safety. Several agents were hit by the projectiles."

The protest was met by a wall of Mexican police officers, prompting the migrants to detour the barricade and head to a train border crossing.

The caravan has crossed closed borders and pushed past police barricades since departing San Pedro Sula, Honduras, in mid-October. Parishes have assisted the original caravan and several subsequent caravans as they passed through southern Mexico; a group of religious offered medical attention, and dioceses have taken up collections.

But now the migrants have run up against the U.S. border and a U.S. administration that has warned that the caravan will not enter the country. The U.S. has allowed fewer than 50 claims to be made daily, even as thousands wait their turn in Mexico.

The caravan also risks becoming unwelcome in Tijuana, where hostile attitudes have already been expressed, border closures hurt the economy and the local government warned resources were running low.

Taking that many people to one border crossing and organizing a march "can't be a good idea. It's a horrific one," said Father Alejandro Solalinde, who operates a migrant shelter in southern Oaxaca state. "But there is no control there whatsoever."

 

"I ... gave them this advice, but they ignored it because the leaders (the activists) taking them made them believe that they were going to be able to do it, when in reality, it wasn't like that," said Father Solalinde.

Jorge Andrade, coordinator of a collective of Catholic-run migrant shelters, called the U.S. response "excessive." In the spring, Andrade said caravan organizers "have good intentions, but they're exposing (the migrants) to danger."

"Unfortunately, there are groups (of migrants) there that want to cross the border under these circumstances," he said in late November.

Father Andres Ramirez, who works with migrants in Tijuana, called the response "unprecedented" and said such a border closure as occurred Nov. 25 had not happened since the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

Father Solalinde has refused to accompany migrants farther north than Mexico City, saying the road poses risks such as kidnap. He recounted how one group of migrants, who were evangelicals, and told him: God will take care of us and "touch the heart" of president Donald Trump.

"They truly thought that God was going to move the heart of this person, but no! no! no! It wasn't like that," Father Solalinde said. He added that some in that group of 250 migrants had gone missing since setting out from Mexico City for Tijuana.

"They wouldn't take into account the current political climate, the (Dec. 1 presidential) transition in Mexico, the bad organization that they had, because they didn't see the opportunity for people to help them," Father Solalinde said, speaking to the haste of many to rush to the border and not fully consider the opportunity to work in Mexico or apply for asylum there.

"These are difficult times (but) it's as if they have this chip, 'They have to go north' and they think that it was going to be the same as the previous times, but it's not like that."

The Mexican government said in a Nov. 25 statement it had detained 98 migrants who were involved in scuffles with police and tried to cross the border at Tijuana.

The Mexican government said in a Nov. 25 statement it had detained 98 migrants who were involved in scuffles with police and tried to cross the border at Tijuana.

It added more than 7,400 migrants from various caravans were currently in the border state of Baja California, while 11,000 migrants had been repatriated or deported to Central America since Oct. 19.

The Washington Post reported Nov. 24 the United States and Mexico's incoming government had reached an agreement known as "Remain in Mexico," in which asylum seekers would wait south of the border while their claims are processed in U.S. courts. Incoming Mexican Interior Minister Olga Sanchez Cordero later denied the story, but did not disavow her comments to the Post confirming a deal.

She also denied Mexico would become a "safe third" country, which would mean migrants in Mexico would be considered to have already found safety.

In effect, "Remain in Mexico is the configuration of Mexico as a safe third country," said Andrade.

Comments are automatically closed two weeks after an article's initial publication. See our comments policy for more.
JOHN GRONDELSKI
5 years 4 months ago

Mexico clearly feels no great measure of solidarity in this matter, and the United States finally showed that a border can be protected and CLOSED.

arthur mccaffrey
5 years 4 months ago

"I ... gave them this advice, but they ignored it because the leaders (the activists) taking them made them believe that they were going to be able to do it, when in reality, it wasn't like that," said Father Solalinde."
So there area are "activists" who are pushing this caravan, dispensing
false hopes--are they getting paid by the migrants? or by somebody else?
I wish America and other media would really dig deeper in their journalism and find out who is behind this mass movement of refugees. That would be so much more helpful than continual publishing of photos of mothers and babies which is really dishonest journalism. This is not a spontaneous eruption in Honduras and Guatemala and Nicaragua--there is something or someone bigger behind this, but nobody is reporting the real story. Sad deception of Americans.

Carol Collins
5 years 4 months ago

Arthur McCaffrey You are so, so, so correct. The media is definitely not publishing the truth about these issues and the "activists" are behind all of the deception. The governments of these Central American countries allow all of the lawlessness, gang violence and corruption to exist in their countries because the leaders themselves of these countries are benefitting financially from doing so and they are also deceiving, using and not protecting their citizens. These Central American Governments are a total travesty and are the cause of all of these problems down there in Central America. Of course the "activists" want to get the citizens out of the country so that they can then move in and "rule" those lawless corrupt countries without interference from the "natives".

Randal Agostini
5 years 4 months ago

At last - an article in America that seems to rely upon facts. There is no question that this is a tragedy. Looking for answers in the news, while following the caravan, has not been easy. Searching for the women and children amongst all the young men. Why were men turning their faces from the camera? This story reveals how so many may have been duped by caravan leaders, who make a living from this deceptive behavior.
What I find most disgusting is the total absence of reasonable leadership in congress, where our laws are made. Successive governments have failed to address this issue other than hurling insults and promoting distressing stories. Trump inherited this problem as much as Obama inherited a lousy economy and that should be sufficient reason for the country to come together to resolve the issue.
All of this makes no sense considering the current need for labor - but it should be handled in a proper manner using resources wisely and efficiently.

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