Residents of Rural Mexican Town are Struggling to Cope with Migrant Crush — and Say American Cities Should Brace for Impact; A Huge Caravan of Migrants has Invaded Mexico on Its Way to the United States | Towards the border
Residents of rural Mexican town are struggling to cope with migrant crush — and say American cities should brace for impact:
Residents of a rural Mexican town say they’ve been overrun with migrants in recent years — and that the crush serves as a preview of what some American cities will soon face.
Thousands of migrants are flocking to Tapachula in the southern Mexican state of Chiapas from Central America, Haiti, Cuba and Venezuela on their way to the US, a local businessman in the coffee trade recently told The Post.
The influx has overwhelmed residents who have worked the local fields for generations but now face increased competition for employment and housing while the migrants use their town as a pit stop.
Locals also are battling against the presence of human and drug traffickers drawn to the area to take advantage of the newly arrived desperate masses.
“The city is almost unrecognizable from just a few years ago,” the coffee-industry businessman said. “It’s just waves of people. The locals don’t know what to think. The place they’ve lived in for so long is totally different all of a sudden.”
Tapachula’s problem is an indicator of how things will be for more and more US cities, residents added. Just this past week, 3,000 migrants who massed in the town set out on foot toward the US border.
The town’s locals say that while the migrants live in their area, longtime residents who dutifully obtain permits to sell modest goods on the street and in area marketplaces are forced to compete with newcomers who don’t bother with such legal formalities and crowd them out.
The increased competition is making it more difficult for the Mexicans to scratch out their already meager existence, forcing them to seek out other means of income in trying economic circumstances, residents said. —>READ MORE HERE
A huge caravan of migrants has invaded Mexico on its way to the United States | Towards the border:
More than 1,200 migrants, mostly Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezuelans, left this Sunday on foot in a new caravan from Tapachula, in southern Mexico, to join a concentration of 8,000 people on the move awaiting possible deportation. benefits from dialogue with immigration authorities this Monday.
The migrant settlement left on October 30 and traveled nearly 50 kilometers in three days to Huixtla, another town in the southern Mexican state of Chiapas.
The contingent was organized a month ago and its main purpose is to obtain documents for legal travel to the northern border of Mexico in the United States.
After their arrival on Wednesday, the nearly 8,000 migrants settled under the dome, sewing their lips, burning piñatas with the image of the head of the National Migration Institute (INM), Francisco Garduño and now they have been waiting a lot for this new caravan of 1,200. people in transit.
This is the second migrant caravan, but it is the most difficult because they have to walk 50 kilometers a day, although some groups think to rest and others want to continue. —>READ MORE HERE
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