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  • “... dozens of National Guard police.”

  • I’m on the Guatemala-Mexico border.

  • This bridge is the main crossing

  • for migrant caravans on their way to the United States.

  • But this group, which left Honduras in mid-January,

  • is about to hit a barrier.

  • And theyre still over 1,000 miles from the U.S. border.

  • [Shouting]

  • Mexico shouldn’t allow millions of people

  • to try and enter our country.”

  • Last year, President Trump threatened Mexico

  • with import tariffs, if the country didn’t seal

  • its border with Guatemala.

  • So Mexico deployed a newly formed security force

  • to block migrants from entering.

  • Now this wave of some 4,000 migrants

  • is putting enforcement here to the test.

  • I wanted to see how Mexico would handle the challenge.

  • What I find is a country taking a much harder line

  • on its southern border, in response to U.S. pressure.

  • I witness three attempts by migrants

  • to cross into Mexico,

  • each time, met with increasing force.

  • This attempt ends with Mexican authorities

  • letting small groups through to register with Migration.

  • It’s a legal obligation,

  • and also a way of breaking up the caravan.

  • Once in Mexico, the first thing migrants hear

  • is a warning from the U.S. repeated over a loudspeaker.

  • And then, an offer to send them home.

  • By the end of the day, close to 2,000 migrants

  • have registered to stay in Mexico,

  • many with the goal of someday still reaching the U.S.

  • What they don’t know is that Mexico will end up returning

  • most of them to Honduras.

  • It’s a new day,

  • and more migrants are on the border,

  • undeterred and ready to cross into Mexico.

  • This time, a few petition Mexican authorities on behalf

  • of the group, appealing for compassion to let them

  • continue the caravan.

  • But Mexico doesn’t budge.

  • So the group turns to Plan B.

  • Border security are waiting for them

  • on the other side of the Suchiate River.

  • The standoff ends with the migrants

  • staying put in Guatemala, and waiting for an opportunity

  • to try to cross again.

  • A few days later, with border security nowhere in sight,

  • hundreds of migrants manage to get through,

  • by crossing the river at a different spot,

  • only to be met by dozens of troops

  • who were waiting for them several miles down the road.

  • [Screaming]

  • [Shouting]

  • Some 800 people are rounded up and forced onto buses,

  • soon to be deported.

  • In the face of pressure from all sides,

  • Mexico stopped this group from reaching the U.S. border,

  • giving the Trump administration exactly what it wants.

“... dozens of National Guard police.”

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