Mothers of young migrants who attempted to travel to the United States from Central America and are now missing arrived in Mexico on Oct. 23 to search for their children.
The group of 24 women, known as the 14th Caravan of Missing Migrants’ Mothers, was accompanied by activists as they crossed into Mexico from Guatemala holding pictures of their children and carrying flags from Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, and Nicaragua.
The group met with migrants who are part of the migrant caravan heading towards the United States that’s estimated to have up to 8,500 people. The migrants and women sang the national anthem of Honduras together.
They plan to cross seven states to search for their children and spend some time in Mexico City.
Ruben Figueroa, the coordinator of the Mesoamerican Migrant Movement, said the mothers would, in addition to searching for their children, try to ask the United Nations to assist the migrant caravan and participate in upcoming events in early November, including the World Summit of Missing Migrants’ Mothers.
Perilous Journey
The journey for people attempting to reach the United States from Central America is perilous, with dangers including being robbed, raped, and killed.Migrants must traverse over 1,000 miles in Mexico alone, and they often travel the so-called “train of death,” a network of local freight trains, to save time.
Mexican police officers often pull migrants off the top of the trains and force them to pay bribes in the form of money or sex, and the migrants often fall from the speeding trains and become seriously injured or killed, as detailed in the best-selling book “Enrique’s Journey” by Sonia Nazario.