Reuters - Central American
countries warned on Thursday that large numbers of migrants have fled their
poor, violent homes since Donald Trump's surprise election
win, hoping to reach
the United States before he takes office next year.
Trump won the Nov. 8
vote by taking a hard line on immigration, threatening to deport millions of
people living illegally in the United States and to erect a wall along the
Mexican border.
Trump's tough
campaign rhetoric sent tremors through the slums of Central America and the
close-knit migrant communities in U.S. cities, with many choosing to
fast-forward their plans and migrate north before Trump takes office on Jan.
20.
During fiscal year
2016, the United States detained nearly 410,000 people along the southwest
border with Mexico, up about a quarter from the previous year. The vast
majority hail from Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras.
Since Trump's
victory, the number of people flocking north has surged, Central American
officials say, contributing to a growing logjam along the southern U.S. border.
"We're worried
because we're seeing a rise in the flow of migrants leaving the country, who
have been urged to leave by coyotes telling them that they have to reach the
United States before Trump takes office," Maria Andrea Matamoros,
Honduras' deputy foreign minister, told Reuters, referring to people smugglers.
Carlos Raul Morales,
Guatemala's foreign minister, told Reuters people were also leaving Guatemala
en masse before Trump becomes president.
"The coyotes
are leaving people in debt, and taking their property as payment for the
journey," he said in an interview.
Last week, U.S.
Customs and Border Protection opened a temporary holding facility for up to 500
people near the Texan border with Mexico, in what it said was a response to a
marked uptick in illegal border crossings.
U.S. Department of
Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson said earlier this month immigration
detention facilities were holding about 10,000 more individuals than usual, after
a spike in October of migrants including unaccompanied children, families and
asylum seekers.
GANG VIOLENCE
Unemployed and sick
of the lack of opportunities and endemic gang violence that blight his poor
neighborhood in the town of San Marcos, south of San Salvador, Carlos Garcia,
25, said he was looking to enter the United States before Trump assumes power.
"There's one
thing I'm very clear about," he said. "I want to get out of
here."
Guatemalan Fares
Revolorio, 27, arrived in the northwestern Mexican border city of Tijuana on
Wednesday after a grueling 4,200-kilometer (2,610-mile), week-long trek by bus.
She was waiting to cross into the United States, where she hoped to apply for
asylum.
Accompanied by her
three children and her husband, she said she left Guatemala as it had become
too dangerous. Her husband's brother was killed two months ago, and local
gangs, known as "maras," had assaulted her son.
"They tell us
the new president doesn't like illegal immigrants, but we have to take the
chance," she said, as she struggled to hold back tears. "Nobody wants
to die in a horrible way, and we can't be in Guatemala any longer. My children
are growing up in fear."
During the campaign,
Trump set out plans to impound billions of dollars of remittances so Mexico
ends up paying for his proposed wall on the southern U.S. border. It remains
unclear if he will stick to the proposal.
Humberto Roque
Villanueva, Mexico's deputy interior minister for migration, told Reuters the
day after the U.S. election that Mexico stands ready to lobby the U.S. Congress
and use all legal means against Trump's plan for blocking remittances.
Victoria Cordova,
who was deported from the United States in 2014, said Trump's victory had sown
fear in her poor hillside slum in the capital Tegucigalpa.
"People are
very worried because many of them have family over there in the United States,
and they live off the remittances they send," she said.
The foreign
ministers of Mexico, El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala met on Monday to
formulate a strategy to protect their migrants in the United States, in a show
of regional solidarity.
At the meeting in
Guatemala City, the foreign ministers asked Mexico for help to create a migrant
protection network, liaise for coordination with U.S. authorities, and to meet
regularly for regional talks.
Reuters
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