Migrant caravan overwhelms Mexican National Guard, resumes march to U.S. border

Migrant

MEXICO CITY, Nov. 5 (Xinhua) -- A migrant caravan traveling on foot through southern Mexico to the U.S. border on Thursday overwhelmed the Mexican National Guard trying to contain its advance and resumed its march toward Mexico City.

The migrants and guard members clashed on the highway linking the towns of Pijijiapan and Tonala in Chiapas state, leaving at least two guard members injured and many people arrested, according to local media reports and images posted on social media.

After the altercation, the caravan, composed of some 4,000 migrants, mostly from Central America and Haiti, has departed from Pijijiapan on its trek north toward Tuxtla Gutierrez, capital of Chiapas.

Luis Rey Garcia Villagran, an activist with the Center for Human Dignification and one of the organizers of the caravan, told local press they were asking for sympathizers to provide buses, so exhausted migrants could continue their journey.

The caravan first departed on Oct. 23 from the city of Tapachula, which borders Guatemala, with the stated objective of reaching Mexico City to regularize migrants' immigration status before setting off again for the U.S. border.

The Central American region is seeing an unprecedented exodus this year. Between January and August, Mexico had reported the entry of more than 147,000 undocumented migrants, tripling the number in 2020, according to figures from the Mexican government.