22 January,2020 09:53 AM IST | Ciudad Hidalgo | Agencies
Migrants run after crossing the Suichate river, the natural border between Guatemala and Mexico on Tuesday. Pic/AFP
Ciudad Hidalgo: Hundreds of Central American migrants were stranded in a sort of no man's land on the river border between Guatemala and Mexico after running up against lines of Mexican National Guard troops deployed to keep them from moving en masse into the country and on north toward the US.
Naked children played amid the sand and trash on Monday evening as clothing and shoes hung from the trees to dry along with the Suchiate River, normally a porous waterway plied all day by rafts ferrying people and goods across.
Men grilled a fish over a small fire below the border bridge, and migrants bedded down under blankets on the banks or dry sections of the riverbed without knowing what might come next.
The path forward was blocked by the Mexican troops with riot shields, and about 100 National Guard agents continued to form a barrier with anti-riot gear into the night. But a return home to impoverished and gang-plagued Honduras, where most of the migrants are from, was unthinkable.
ALSO READ
US NSA Sullivan and Yunus express commitment to protect human rights in Bangladesh
US expresses concern over sentencing of 25 civilians by Pakistan military court
Bill Clinton is hospitalized with fever but in good spirits, says spokesperson
Pakistan govt agrees to consult PTI chief Imran Khan as negotiations begin
UN investigative team says Syria's new authorities 'very receptive' to probe of Assad war crimes
"We are in no man's land," said Alan MejÃa, whose 2-year-old son was cradled in his arms clad only in a diaper as his wife, Ingrid Vanesa Portillo, and their other son, 12, gazed at the riverbanks. MejÃa joined in five previous migrant caravans but never made it farther than the Mexican border city of Tijuana.
"They are planning how to clear us out, and here we are without water or food," said a desperate Portillo. Unlike was often the case with previous caravans, there was no sign of humanitarian aid arriving for those stuck at the river.
Throngs waded across the Suchiate into southern Mexico on Monday hoping to test US President Donald Trump's strategy to keep Central American migrants away from the US border.
Some scuffled with National Guard troops on the riverbank while others slipped through the lines and trudged off on a rural highway, with most taken into custody later in the day. Still, others were taken into custody on the spot or chased into the brush.
4,000
Total no. of migrants who entered Guatemala last week
Catch up on all the latest Crime, National, International and Hatke news here. Also download the new mid-day Android and iOS apps to get latest updates
This story has been sourced from a third party syndicated feed, agencies. Mid-day accepts no responsibility or liability for its dependability, trustworthiness, reliability and data of the text. Mid-day management/mid-day.com reserves the sole right to alter, delete or remove (without notice) the content in its absolute discretion for any reason whatsoever