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Migrant caravan on way to U.S. grows in southern Mexico

A group of walking migrants, one holding a large cross, stretches back into the distance.
Migrants leave Huixtla, Mexico, early Oct. 27, 2021, as they continue their trek north toward Mexico’s northern states and the U.S. border.
(Marco Ugarte / Associated Press)
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A growing migrant caravan set out early Wednesday after a day of rest on its trek across southern Mexico.

About 2,000 migrants had walked out of the southern city of Tapachula near the Guatemala border on Saturday. While the multitude is challenging to count, it appeared significantly larger Wednesday and its leaders estimated its size at 4,000.

“The caravan is like a magnet, it goes sucking up people, migrants who had been in the towns [of coastal Chiapas] are joining,” said Irineo Mújica, an immigration activist with the organization People without Borders.

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One of them was Bayron Zavala, a Nicaraguan migrant, who hearing that the caravan was advancing slowly, got on a bicycle and caught up with it in Huixtla. He said he would walk with the others “as far as God gives us the strength ... if possible, continue to the United States.”

Without any issue, the migrants passed a customs, immigration and military checkpoint where authorities typically seize drugs and look for human smugglers.

Though still significantly smaller than caravans in 2018 and 2019, this is the biggest group moving through southern Mexico since the pandemic started early last year. In January, a caravan left Honduras, but authorities in Guatemala broke it up.

Other groups that have walked out of Tapachula this year have numbered in the hundreds. All were dissolved by Mexican authorities, sometimes with excessive force. Those groups were composed mostly of Haitian migrants. This caravan is primarily made up of Central Americans.

The national guard has not tried to intervene since it attempted to block migrants on Saturday. There were scuffles and a child was injured.

Foreign Affairs Secretary Marcelo Ebrard said Monday that the government would act “prudently,” respecting the law and human rights.

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Mexico has deployed thousands of soldiers, police and immigration agents in the south, and in recent years no large groups have made it out of the states bordering Guatemala.

On Wednesday, the migrants were aiming for Villa Comaltitlán, about 13 miles away.

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