News
| Mar 30, 2021

Migrant caravan of hundreds of Hondurans departs for United States

/ Our Today

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Hondurans ride in the back of a truck as they take part in a new caravan of migrants set to head to the U.S., in Choloma, Honduras March 30, 2021. REUTERS/Yoseph Amaya

(Reuters)

Several hundred Hondurans set off on Tuesday (March 30) for the Guatemalan border, seeking to reach the United States to escape the impact of the coronavirus pandemic and natural disasters, according to local media and a Reuters witness.

The group was the second large caravan to set out from Honduras this year, on the heels of catastrophic flooding in November from hurricanes Eta and Iota, which battered an economy that was already seriously struggling.

Central Americans have made up the bulk of a sharp increase in migrants trying to reach the United States via Mexico in recent weeks, putting pressure on US President Joe Biden. The crisis includes the arrival of thousands of unaccompanied children who have crossed the US-Mexico border.

Hondurans pause their walking to look for a ride as they take part in a new caravan of migrants set to head to the U.S., in Choloma, Honduras March 30, 2021. REUTERS/Yoseph Amaya

The migrants, mostly young adults with backpacks and women carrying children, had begun walking in the early morning from a bus terminal in the northern city of San Pedro Sula to the town of Corinto at the Guatemalan border, 114 kms (71 miles) away.

By early afternoon, part of the migrant caravan had covered about 20 kms to the Honduran city of Choloma, where some hitched rides on trucks and buses and crammed into the back of pickups, Reuters images show. Others continued on foot.

“You have to take risks to have a better life in the United States. In Honduras we’re never going to do anything,” migrant Carlos Flores told a local television station. “Here you can hardly eat with what you earn, if you can even find work.”

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