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Migrants set out anew to distant US border

Published:Wednesday | October 24, 2018 | 12:00 AM
Central American migrants traveLling with a caravan to the U.S. crowd onto a tractor as they make their way to Mapastepec, Mexico, yesterday.

HUIXTLA (AP):

Thousands of Central American migrants renewed their hoped-for march to the United States on Wednesday, setting out before dawn with plans to travel another 45 miles (75 kilometres) of the more than 1,000 miles that still lie before them.

The five days of walking in the southernmost reaches of Mexico - after seven days in Honduras and Guatemala - were beginning to show; Mexican authorities said Wednesday that about 500 migrants had accepted an offer to be bussed back to their countries. Many said they were sick or exhausted, especially the children who toddled or were carried along on the march.

Still, the size of the caravan - estimated by the United Nations at more than 7,000 strong - seemed basically undiminished as the throng set out in darkness cut by occasional flashlights or the spotlights of municipal police who were escorting them.

Rosa Duvon of Cofradia Cortes in Honduras was pushing two baby boys, both named Daniel - a son and a nephew - in a rickety donated baby carriage over a potholed road at 5 a.m.

"This thing is going to die," she said of the carriage, pointing to a wobbly back wheel. Still, she vowed to keep going.

In worse condition was Maria del Carmen Mejia of Copan, Honduras, who was already sweating profusely before dawn. She carried in her arms three-year-old Britany Sofia Alvarado, while with her other hand, she clutched the hand of Miralia Alejandra Alvarado, seven, who was also sweaty - and fevered.