Trump Administration Crackdown on Immigration Does Little to Deter Guatemalan Families
Trump Administration Crackdown on Immigration Does Little to Deter Guatemalan Families
The Trump administration’s crackdown on immigration isn’t doing much to deter new arrivals.A New York Times special focusing on Guatemalan migrants outlines the plight of Central American families, many of whom are willing to risk deportation in order to escape extreme poverty and widespread violence.Liset Juarez’s husband, writes the Times, was one such migrant.Six months ago, the unnamed, anonymous man left his wife and three children behind in Concepcion Chiquirichapa, Guatemala. With a single, small bag in tow, Juarez set off on a 1,200-mile trip to the United States border.Arrest is the last concern for many migrants, who are forced to contend with ‘unscrupulous smugglers, dangerous desert crossings and possible kidnapping by deadly Mexican drug cartels.’But Juarez, like many of his countrymen, felt he had few other options.“What can we do?” asked Liset Juarez. “We have to feed our children.”He’s just one of “thousands of Guatemalans who have ignored a messaging campaign of billboards and radio and TV ads by the American and Guatemalan governments that warn against the dangerous journey to the United States.”The Times says that in the past year alone, about 42,757 Guatemalans traveling as families were apprehended, detained or otherwise stopped at the United States border with Mexico.
Image via Wikimedia Commons. Cacahuate, translations by Joelf, Globe-trotter and Piet-c. (CCA-BY-2.0).
Sources
U.S. Campaign Against Migration Goes Unheard, or Unheeded, in Guatemala
About Ryan J. Farrick
Ryan Farrick is a freelance writer and small business advertising consultant based out of mid-Michigan. Passionate about international politics and world affairs, he’s an avid traveler with a keen interest in the connections between South Asia and the United States. Ryan studied neuroscience and has spent the last several years working as an operations manager in transportation logistics.