Over 100 Central American Migrants Detained in Northern Mexico

Over 100 Central American Migrants Detained in Northern Mexico
Migrants arrive at an Annunciation House facility to be cared for after being released by the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement on January 14, 2019 in El Paso, Texas. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

MEXICO CITY—Mexican police and federal officials on Saturday detained 107 Central American migrants seeking to enter the United States in the border city of Reynosa, the government of the northeastern state of Tamaulipas said.

Following a tip-off, state police intercepted a group of migrants who had been taken out of trucks in a western part of the city, which lies across the border from McAllen, Texas.

At the scene, unidentified gunmen began shooting at police, and one of the attackers was killed in the ensuing exchange of fire, the Tamaulipas government said in a statement.

The statement said police seized a firearm and cartridges but did not provide details on whether any gunmen were arrested or who they were.

Separately, police discovered a group of Central American men and women on the edge of a highway in Reynosa. They called in federal migration officials, who are now reviewing the legal status of the Central Americans detained, the government said.

The National Migration Institute counted 51 Guatemalans, 47 Hondurans and 9 Salvadorans detained in total, it added.

Mexico’s new government has pledged to regulate and stem the flows of people moving from Central America to its northern border as it seeks to reduce tensions with U.S. President Donald Trump over illegal immigration into the United States.

By Anthony Esposito

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More Central American Asylum Seekers Returned to Mexico Under New Policy

The United States has returned the first group of asylum seekers to Mexico, where they will wait out their cases, after the start of a new Trump administration immigration policy.

A man named Carlos from Honduras arrived in Tijuana on January 29 under the new policy, called the Migrant Protection Protocol (MPP). He is the first of many asylum seekers from the Northern Triangle who will be sent back to Mexico until their immigration court date in the United States—at which point, they will be allowed to enter the country to attend their hearings.

As of Jan. 30, at least a dozen people have been returned to Tijuana through the San Ysidro Port of Entry, including one woman.

Honduran migrant Marlon Ariel Mendez was part of a group of asylum-seekers who were returned to Tijuana on Jan. 30. Mendez, 19, told reporters he was glad to be back in Mexico, after being detained in a immigration detention facility.

“Thanks to God, I didn’t want to be there (in detention), above all else because of the food,” he said.

Mendez said he was not worried about being returned to Mexico.

“It’s better to be here than locked up.”

Secretary of Homeland Security Kirstjen Nielsen’s visit to San Diego’s San Ysidro Port of Entry kicked off the start of the policy on Jan 29. That day only one asylum seeker walked back through the port gates, although the United States has said it will send 20 per day.

“The MPP will enable DHS to take a huge step forward in bringing order to chaotic migration flows, restoring the rule of law and the integrity of the United States immigration system, and allowing DHS to focus resources on providing relief to individuals fleeing persecution while at the same time holding those accountable who make false asylum claims,” said Nielsen.

Nielsen announced the new MPP in December. The policy is an attempt by the Trump administration to curb the large number family units—mostly from Central America—from traveling north to seek asylum in the United States and subsequently disappearing into the country under the “catch-and-release” loophole.

In fiscal year 2017, border patrol apprehended 94,285 family units from Honduras, Guatemala, and El Salvador at the Southern border. Of those, 99% remain in the country today, according to the Department of Homeland Security.

So far, the policy is only active in San Diego’s San Ysidro Port of Entry, the busiest border crossing in the country. Thousands of migrants from the Northern Triangle countries arrived in nearby Tijuana last year. It’s also believed to be the destination of the latest Honduran caravan headed north.

Honduran reporter Josue Cover told The Epoch Times on Jan. 17 that coyotes encourage migrants in the caravan to bring young children along the journey north.

“The coyotes tell them that ‘please, if you are going to come, then come with a minor, with a baby, because that way you are given more support,’ that is, they are given the opportunity to cross to the United States,” said Cover.

Cover said local coyotes also tell minors they have a better chance if entering the United States if they go alone.

“They [coyotes] say that the immigration authorities help them and that they have compassion for them, whereas if you go without children, or you are an adult male—it is very difficult.”

Tijuana’s Public Safety Secretary Marco Antonio Sotomayor called out Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador and the Mexican federal government for agreeing to the policy.

“Today the United States returned to the first Central American foreigner to Tijuana, something unprecedented, incredibly @lopezobrador_ and the @GobiernoMX agreed to receive the Central American, fulfilling the instructions of @realDonaldTrump and violating the national sovereignty, shameful!”

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