Hundreds of migrants, lured to Acapulco by Mexican officials, find themselves stranded in the troubled resort city. This comes as Mexico continues to disperse migrants across the country, aiming to prevent them from reaching the U.S. border.
About 100 migrants from various countries wandered directionless and disoriented through the streets of the troubled Pacific coast resort of Acapulco . After walking for a couple weeks through southern Mexico with hundreds of other migrants, they accepted an offer from immigration officials to come to Acapulco with the idea they could continue their journey north toward the U.S. border. Instead, they found themselves stuck on Monday.
Two weeks ahead of President-elect Donald Trump's second inauguration, Mexico continues dissolving attention-grabbing migrant caravans and dispersing migrants throughout the country to keep them far from the U.S. border, while simultaneously limiting how many accumulate in any one place. The policy of 'dispersion and exhaustion' has become the center of the Mexican government's immigration policy in recent years and last year succeeded in significantly reducing the number of migrants reaching the U.S. border, said Tonatiuh Guillén, former chief of Mexico's immigration agency. Mexico's current administration hopes that the lower numbers will give them some defense from Trump's pressures, said Guillen, who left the administration of former President Andrés Manuel López Obrador after Trump threatened to impose tariffs over migration during his first presidency. Acapulco would seem to be a strange destination for migrants. Once a crown jewel of Mexico's tourism industry, the city now suffers under the thumb of organized crime and is still struggling to climb back after taking a direct hit from devastating Hurricane Otis in 2023. On Monday, Mexican tourists enjoyed the final hours of their holiday beach vacations while migrants slept in the street or tried to find ways to resume their journeys north. 'Immigration (officials) told us they were going to give us a permit to transit the country freely for 10, 15 days and it wasn't like that,' said a 28-year-old Venezuelan, Ender Antonio Castañed
MIGRANTS MEXICO US BORDER DISPERSION POLICY ACAPULCO
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