About 300,000 migrants from around the globe entered Mexico with the intention of illegally crossing into the United States in the first three months of 2019, according to Mexican officials.
Sánchez Cordero described this migration flow as “unprecedented and unusual” and added that “six caravanas madrecitas” or little mother caravans that have around 2,000 people in each entering Mexico in recent months.
Sánchez Cordero did not specify how it was determined that these migrants wanted to enter the United States illegally.
Moreover, Foreign Affairs Secretary Marcelo Ebrard said that they were not detaining migrants in response to pressure from the United States, adding that Mexico’s immigration policy has not changed and will not change.
Mexican authorities had detained 371 migrants including women and children in Mapastepec, Chiapas, on April 22, but Sánchez Cordero said this occurred because the migrants were acting aggressively toward National Immigration Institute (INM) personnel, reported Mexico News Daily.
The increase of migrants trying to enter the United States is backed up by Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) data.
Fraudulent Family Cases
In a recent press conference, acting Department of Homeland Security chief, Kevin McAleenan said the Border Patrol has identified over 3,000 fraudulent family unit cases in the past six months.“The same child is brought across the border with an adult multiple times to try and gain that release that family units are required under court order,” McAleenan said.
In a tweet on April 23, McAleenan continued to highlight the problem, saying, “Children making the journey north are the most vulnerable. They’re arriving sicker than ever after the brutal journey—smugglers realize the loopholes in our laws and are exploiting them to profit. @DHSgov is doing everything we can to confront this dangerous epidemic.”
Moreover, CBP continued to warn about the orchestrated efforts’ of people smugglers to bring individuals in the United States.
On April 24, the agency released a video showing heavily armed men escorting a woman and her son across the southwestern border.
“#BorderPatrol cameras observed armed men escorting a mother and her 8-year-old son to the int’l boundary west of Lukeville, AZ,” the federal agency wrote on April 23. “The armed men dropped off the pair in an area commonly used by smugglers to bring large groups of Central Americans into the country illegally.”