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Mexico deports migrants after flashpoint

China Daily | Updated: 2018-11-28 09:24
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Two children who are members of a caravan of migrants from Central America trying to reach the United States play in a temporary shelter in Tijuana, Mexico, on Tuesday. REUTERS

TIJUANA, Mexico - Authorities deported scores of Central American migrants arrested after hundreds forced their way through a Mexican police blockade and headed for the United States but were met with tear gas and rubber bullets.

Around 500 men, women and children, part of a caravan of roughly 5,000 mainly Hondurans who have been trekking toward the US for weeks, scrambled over a rusted metal fence and surged into a concrete riverbed toward San Diego on Sunday.

The group was stopped by a chain-link fence topped with barbed wire and US Border Patrol agents firing tear gas and rubber bullets. At least one man was wounded.

Chief Patrol Agent Rodney Scott told CNN that "numerous" migrants - mainly men - had made it across, however, and 42 of them were arrested.

Mexico's National Institute of Migration Commissioner Gerardo Garcia confirmed the 98 arrests on his country's side, saying there were "instigators" in the migrant caravan pushing people to illegally cross the border.

The incident was the most serious flashpoint in a weekslong crisis that US President Donald Trump used to drum up support in this month's midterm elections.

Trump hit out again by threatening a permanent closure of the frontier, and defended the use of tear gas by US border patrol.

"They had to use (it) because they were being rushed by some very tough people and they used tear gas and here's the bottom line: Nobody's coming into our country unless they come in legally," Trump told reporters.

"The tear gas is a very minor form of the tear gas itself. It's very safe," he later added.

Mexico sent a diplomatic note requesting that US authorities "conduct a thorough investigation of the events during which nonlethal US weapons were used in Mexico".

Most of the migrants stumbled back into camp in the northwestern Mexican city of Tijuana, dirty, scared and with ripped clothes.

"We're here with broken hearts and hopes," said Andy Colon, a 20-year-old who traveled from Honduras with her sister and two children.

"We were deluded into believing that we had already reached the United States, and that they would grant us asylum."

Trump, who for weeks has been condemning the caravan, lashed out once more.

"Mexico should move the flag waving migrants, many of whom are stone cold criminals, back to their countries," he tweeted.

AFP - AP

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