Guatemala officials disperse migrants, but some keep trying
CHIQUIMULA, Guatemala — United States officials are crediting tough measures taken over the past year and co-operation from regional governments for sharply reducing the number of Central American migrants who responded to a call for a new caravan.
But even so, the several thousand mostly Honduran migrants who set out on foot this week are a testament to the continued driving forces of violence and unemployment plaguing the region.
Guatemalan police accompanied by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents swept up the majority of a group of some 300 migrants Thursday, loaded them on buses and took them back to the Honduran border at Corinto, effectively dashing their plans to travel together in a “caravan” with hopes of reaching the United States.
Near another border crossing in Guatemala, police worked out a deal with migrants to take those who had entered the country without registering back to the border to do so and then ferry them back to the migrant shelter in Esquipulas. It was unclear how many would continue and how many would turn around.