Mexico detains dozens of migrants in raid on freight train

Young journalists club

News ID: 41289
Publish Date: 15:03 - 28 June 2019
TEHRAN, Jun 28 - About 100 Mexican soldiers and immigration agents raided a freight train in the southern state of Chiapas on Thursday and detained dozens of Central American migrants riding atop the cars.

Mexico detains dozens of migrants in raid on freight trainTEHRAN, Young Journalists Club (YJC) - Such raids had been rare since the last crackdown on migrants in 2014. But under increasing U.S. pressure to reduce the flow of hundreds of thousands of Central Americans through Mexican territory, Mexico's government has stepped up enforcement.

At least some of the troops wore armbands of Mexico's newly formed National Guard. The government says it has deployed thousands of Guard agents across the country with supporting immigration enforcement.

In a scene filmed by Associated Press journalists, the train rolled to a stop in a rural area, and then soldiers climbed ladders to the top of freight cars shouting, "This is the army, you're surrounded!"

Throngs of migrants sought to flee by running along the tops of freight cars, while others clambered down to the ground and headed into the brush.

One soldier was seen wrestling a young, flailing man into a waiting immigration van by the neck. Agents filled three such vehicles with migrants, but hundreds more were apparently able to escape.

The train may have been carrying as many as 400 migrants, and Mexico's Immigration Institute said it detained 40.

The most recent such raid occurred May 1 in the state of Oaxaca. Central Americans have been riding freight trains, collectively known as "La Bestia," or The Beast, for years.

Previous raids have served to temporarily discourage migrants from hopping aboard the trains, which is technically prohibited but has long been tolerated.

The raid came the same day authorities in the Gulf coast state of Veracruz detained more than 450 migrants in a series of operations, including nearly 260 who were taken into custody in raids on hotels, motels and the main bus station in the city of Veracruz.

"We have been making detentions in the entire state," said Edgar González Suárez, the Immigration Institute's delegate for Veracruz. He called the raids in the Veracruz city "perhaps the biggest operation" to take place there, and said most of the migrants were Hondurans and Guatemalans.

Meanwhile 134 migrants were discovered in a crowded tractor-trailer abandoned along a highway elsewhere in Veracruz state, according to a joint statement from several federal agencies.

Source: AP

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