Migrantes Centroamericanos

Caravan of Mothers of Disappeared Migrants
Movimiento Migrante Mesoamericano, Americas Program, 10 / December / 2015
It is estimated that there are between 70,000 and 120,000 migrants missing in transit in Mexico since 2006. There are no reliable statistics that determine their quantity. The puny official figures reflect that the families of the disappeared lack the resources or migration documents to come to Mexico and file formal reports in the public ministries, which are the only door to the official registry system and cannot be considered even remotely adequate. These estimates are based on the second Special Report on Kidnapping of Migrants in Mexico by the National Human Rights Commission, published in February 2011 that counted 214 kidnappings with a total of 11,333 victims in only six months.
http://www.cipamericas.org/archives/17946


Deportation, Detention and Abuse on the U.S.-Guatemala Border
By Laura Carlsen. Americas Program, Sept 8, 2015
Mexico’s southern border has become the line of contention of the most powerful country in the world. The victims of this extraterritorial policy are Central American migrants who cross every day, seeking to save their lives and their families from the violence and hunger plaguing their countries. They try to arrive to USA, but the Mexican Migra stop them.

Centroamericanos en Mexico: de migrantes a refugiados
http://www.jornada.unam.mx/2015/10/21/politica/005n1pol


Deportados "repatriados" a Mex 2014 vs Mojados y Deportados de Mex 2014. http://www.jornada.unam.mx/2015/10/17/politica/012n1pol

More Mexicans Leaving the U.S. than Entering

More Mexicans Leaving the U.S. than Entering. 
Aljazeera, Dec 4, 2015

Is Mexican Immigration to the U.S. a Thing of the Past? Mexican Immigration Is Going South. More Mexicans Leaving the U.S. than Entering. But why?  

https://www.facebook.com/ajplusenglish/videos/652337551574422/?fref=nf
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3q9H1n_-EKE

Border Patrol Brutality

Francisco Ceceña, December 2014
Protest Along Mexico Border for Man Who Died While in CBP Custody
Doris Quintanilla- Protesters rallied along the San Ysidro Port of Entry Saturday afternoon, demanding justice for the man who died while in U.S. Customs and Border Protection custody on Christmas Eve. Community members and relatives of 40-year-old Francisco Cesena held up signs and chanted in front of the Port of Entry. His mother and best friend were among those present. NBC San Diego, Jan 10, 2015

Family of Man Who Died in CBP Custody Creates Quilt

Brooke Martell- A man who died after being tased by U.S. Border Patrol agents in San Ysidro is being remembered through the creation of a quilt panel. The family of Francisco Cesena will create a quilt to represent their loved one and 170 others in order to raise awareness about border militarization and accountability. CBS San Diego, April 21, 2015

Protestan en garitas contra asesinato de mexicano

Mexicali, 26 de octubre.- En las garitas de Calexico (Mexicali) y San Ysidro (Tijuana) activistas en apoyo de migrantes protestaron contra la forma de actuar de la Patrulla Fronteriza y exigieron justicia por la muerte de Miguel Ángel Galeana a manos de un agente estadunidense, quien le disparó por supuestamente sentirse amenazado. La Jornada de Baja California, 27 Nov 2015
No One is Illegal - Me dicen el ilegal.html

Outsourcing a Refugee Crisis: U.S. Paid Mexico Millions to Target Central Americans Fleeing Violence.



Democracy Now
, October 13, 2015

As immigration has become a key issue on the campaign trail, we look at a startling new report that finds "the United States has outsourced a refugee problem to Mexico that is similar to the refugee crisis now roiling Europe." In her New York Times opinion piece, "The Refugees at Our Door," Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Sonia Nazario describes how the Obama administration is paying the Mexican government to keep people from reaching the U.S. border—people who often have legitimate asylum claims. We speak to Nazario about the harrowing stories she heard from Central American refugees in shelters in southern Mexico.

Remesas ganan a petroleo y turismo

Remesas ganan a petroleo y turismo
Las remesas se consolidaron como una de las principales fuentes de divisas para el país, arriba de la exportación de petróleo y la llegada de turistas extranjeros, en un momento en que la migración hacia Estados Unidos comenzó a crecer nuevamente después de varios años de permanecer prácticamente sin cambio, de acuerdo con información divulgada este jueves por el Banco de México y analistas privados. http://www.jornada.unam.mx/2015/10/02/economia/023n1eco

Deported to Mexico: a lost generation

Nina Lakhani. The Guardian, Sun 17 May 2015


At least 500,000 young people, whose Mexican parents illegally crossed into the United States, have been forced back across the border, often knowing nothing of their new home. Nina Lakhani meets some of those they call the ‘dreamers’

For the children of undocumented Mexican migrants in the United States, life demands secrecy. They learn to navigate between the two cultures while hiding their illegal status – all the while praying for immigration reform. Their Mexican memories – if they remember at all – are replaced by American dreams. After a few years, they often feel, look and sound so American, they can forget that, in the eyes of the law, they are aliens.

But they are, and they can be arrested at any moment. At least 500,000 young adults who grew up in the US have been deported or have decided to return to Mexico in the past decade. For many it is akin to arriving in a foreign country for the second time, but this time they lack a child’s ability to acclimatise. For years, little was known about what happened to these youngsters, but a picture is now emerging of a well-educated, bilingual, bicultural group whose traumas and talents are being ignored. This is in part due to groups trying to raise awareness of their plight. One such network is Los Otros Dreamers – the Other Dreamers. The name is a reference to the young migrants who would benefit from the Dream Act, a US bill first introduced in 2001, but still not passed, which would have paved the way to citizenship for those brought to the US as children.