A group of 2,000 migrants advance through southern Mexico in hopes of reaching the US

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A group of 2,000 migrants advance through southern Mexico in hopes of reaching the US

TAPACHULA, Mexico (AP) — A group of 2,000 migrants from dozens of countries set out on foot Tuesday through southern Mexico as they attempt to reach the U.S., although recent similar attempts have failed, with groups disbanding after a few days without leaving the region.

Several members of the group said they hoped to reach the U.S. before the November presidential election as they fear that if Donald Trump wins, he will follow through on a promise to close the border to asylum-seekers.

Entire families, women with baby strollers, children accompanied by their parents and adults started walking before sunrise from Tapachula, considered the primary access point to Mexico’s southern border, to avoid the high temperatures. They hoped to advance 40 kilometers (24 miles).

Several hundred migrants left the Suchiate River on Sunday, a natural border with Guatemala and Mexico, encouraged by a call to join a caravan that began to spread on social media a couple of weeks earlier.

A group of 2,000 migrants advance through southern Mexico in hopes of reaching the US

“All of us here are hard-working human beings, we’re fighters,” said Laydi Sierra, a Venezuelan migrant traveling with dozens of family members. She said she has not been following the U.S. campaign, but wishes that Trump loses “because he wants nothing to do with migrants.”

Almost daily, dozens of people leave Tapachula on their way to the U.S. border. However, the formation of larger groups with hundreds or thousands of people moving through southern Mexico has become regular in the last few years. It tends to occur with changes in regional migration policy.

These groups are sometimes led by activists, but also by the migrants who get tired of waiting for legal documents to allow them to move inside Mexico.

Carlos Pineda, a Salvadorian migrant who left his country because he couldn’t find work, said about 30 people are organizing the group, but did not provide further details.

On Tuesday, as they passed by one of the closed migration checkpoints, several migrants chanted, “Yes, we can; yes, we can.”

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