Translate page with Google

Story Publication logo April 1, 2019

U.S. Immigration: The View From Mexico and Guatemala

Country:

Author:
Border fence between United States and Mexico in Nogales, Arizona. Image by Shutterstock. United States, 2017.
English

How a cycle of debt and increased enforcement is leaving a void in some rural Guatemalan schools and...

SECTIONS
Aerial view of Antigua. Image by Marco Verch. Guatemala, 2018.
Aerial view of Antigua. Image by Marco Verch. Guatemala, 2018.

Listen to full audio here.

U.S. Border Patrol sectors are reporting they are overwhelmed by the current numbers of families and small children arriving at the southern border. With processing centers filled to capacity, they've begun releasing asylum seekers into the communities in states including Arizona or are sending them back across the border to await their asylum hearings in Mexico.

While reports about walls, razor wire and detention centers continue to top the news, they are only part of the story of the current immigration narrative. This week The Buzz brings different perspectives to the conversation.

Many of those trying to cross the border now come from Central America, fleeing countries like Honduras and Guatemala. They make the weekslong trip through Mexico to get to the U.S. border. The Buzz talked with Jorge Valencia, a reporter based in Mexico City for KJZZ's Fronteras Desk, to understand how Mexico has been handling this through-migration and how new President Andrés Manuel López Obrador has reacted to President Donald Trump's hardline immigration stance and rhetoric.

Since October 2016, more than 660,000 families and minors traveling alone have turned themselves in to Border Patrol agents along the Southwest border. More than 100,000 others have presented themselves at ports of entry in just the last two years.

About 40 percent of them are from Guatemala.

Arizona Daily Star reporter Perla Trevizo recently traveled to Guatemala to gain some perspective on what is happening there, and joined The Buzz to talk about her reporting.

Her story will appear in the Star in the coming weeks.

RELATED CONTENT

RELATED TOPICS

teal halftone illustration of a family carrying luggage and walking

Topic

Migration and Refugees

Migration and Refugees

RELATED INITIATIVES

two cows

Initiative

Bringing Stories Home

Bringing Stories Home

Support our work

Your support ensures great journalism and education on underreported and systemic global issues