Home WebMail | Calgary | 16.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Action News
  • World
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • Africa
    • Americas
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Contact
  • Breaking News
  • Latest Updates
  • Featured
  • Live
  • Live Now
  • Al Jazeera reporter reflects on two years of war in Gaza
  • Fighting reported in Syria’s Aleppo between army and SDF
  • Nobel Prize for Physics awarded to trio for quantum mechanics discoveries
  • The young children killed by Israeli fire this year in occupied West Bank
  • Israel’s attempt to annihilate Gaz
  • 77-year-old Indian professor campaigns for Gaza every day
  • Gaza in a thousand faces: Two years of Israel’s genocide
  • US and China provoke sharp fall in global outlook for renewable power
  • Indonesia ends search for victims of school collapse with at least 61 dead
  • Five Georgia opposition leaders charged with ‘coup’ attempt after protests
  • Two years of Israel’s genocide in Gaza: By the numbers
  • US media implying that Hamas threatens Gaza deal is just “nonsense”
  • UNESCO board backs Egypt’s Khaled el-Enany as its next chief
  • Venezuela’s Maduro says US embassy ‘false flag’ bombing foiled in Caracas
  • After two years of war, do Israelis support Netanyahu?
  • Harvard ruled as legally liable for theft of body parts from morgue
  • Live: Israel’s genocide continues across Gaza two years since start of war
  • LeBron James’s post causes retirement rumours as Lakers ticket prices rise
  • One killed, several injured in Syrian Army, SDF clashes in Aleppo: Reports
  • How the US funded Israel’s wars on Gaza, Lebanon, Iran
  • Marc Marquez to miss two MotoGP rounds with shoulder injury
  • As Israel systematically destroys Gaza City, those fleeing have few options
  • Why is the US military is being deployed in US cities?
  • Trump walks back offer to talk to Democrats as government shutdown extends
  • How Ladakh protest leader Sonam Wangchuk went from Indian hero to ‘traitor’

In Pictures: Desperation to migrate grows in battered Honduras

By Al Jazeera Published 2021-02-15 08:43 Updated 2021-02-15 08:43 Source: Al Jazeera

The second-largest city in Honduras, San Pedro Sula, is the economic engine and the departure gate for thousands of Honduran migrants in recent years. There, many families are caught in a cycle of migration. Poverty and gang violence push them out and increasingly aggressive measures to stop them, driven by the United States government, scuttle their efforts and send them back.

The economic damage of the COVID-19 pandemic and the devastation wrought by November’s hurricanes have only added to those driving forces. Word of a new administration in the US with a softer approach to migrants has raised hopes, too.

In his first weeks in office, US President Joe Biden signed nine executive orders reversing Trump measures related to family separation, border security and immigration. But fearing a surge in immigration, the administration also sent the message that little will change quickly for migrants arriving at the southern US border.

 

The Chamelecon River flows by the Saviñon Cruz neighbourhood which was completely submerged during last year’s hurricanes Eta and Iota in San Pedro Sula. [Moises Castillo/AP Photo]
The Sula Valley, Honduras’s most agriculturally productive, was so heavily damaged by hurricanes Iota and Eta that international organisations have warned of a food crisis. The World Food Programme says three million Hondurans face food insecurity, six times higher than before the hurricanes. The dual hurricanes affected an estimated four million of 10 million Honduran people. The area is also Honduras’s hardest-hit by COVID-19 infections.

“It’s a vicious cycle,” said Dana Graber Ladek, head of the International Organization for Migration office in Mexico. “They’re suffering poverty, violence, the hurricanes, unemployment, domestic violence, and with that dream of a new [US] administration, of new opportunities, they’re going to try [to migrate] again and again.”

A man cleans outside his shack, built after his home was destroyed by last year’s hurricanes Eta and Iota in the La Samaritana community of La Lima, on the outskirts of San Pedro Sula. [Moises Castillo/AP Photo]
The last several attempted caravans have been foiled, first in Mexico and later in Guatemala, but the daily flow of migrants moved by smugglers continues and has shown signs of increasing. The hope and misinformation associated with the new US administration help that business too.

After the 2018 caravans and rising number of migrants at the US border in early 2019, the US government pressured Mexico and Central American countries to do more to slow migration across their territories. Numbers fell in the latter half of 2019 and Mexico and Guatemala effectively stopped caravans in 2020. In December, a caravan leaving San Pedro Sula did not even make it out of Honduras.

But the US has reported a rising number of encounters at the border, showing that beyond the caravans, the migration flow is increasing again.

Photos

×
×