The “Paso a Paso Hacia La Paz” Migrant Rights
Caravan: A March Towards Justice
Cross-posted with the Latin America Working Group
Blog: http://www.lawg.org/action-center/lawg-blog/69-general/915-the-paso-a-paso-hacia-la-paz-migrant-rights-caravan-a-march-towards-justice
When Ana Pineda* left her small village in
Nacaome, Honduras in 2009, she was full of hope: “I had dreams of going to the
United States to get a good job and to help support my mother and father.” But
her hopes were soon crushed when she was kidnapped by criminal gangs in
Coatzalcoalcos, a coastal city in Veracruz, Mexico that is a frequent transit
point for Central American migrants. “They brought me to a house in Tamaulipas,
Mexico and had me there for four months, imprisoned along with other Central
Americans, South Americans, and Mexicans. I was abused, terribly abused. Many
of the others were raped, even the men. Thank God I was able to escape.”
Though the experience of being kidnapped has left
Ana with many scars, she didn’t let it break her spirit. Instead, she decided
to fight back. This past July she joined over 500 other migrants and advocates
in the “Step by Step
Towards Peace” (“Paso a Paso Hacia la Paz”) Caravan, a week-long
protest tour through Mexico to demand justice for migrants.
The Caravan was organized in response to the rising
levels of violence carried out against migrants transiting through Mexico. Each
year, an estimated 300,000 migrants,
mostly from Central America, leave their hometowns and travel northward through
Mexico in search of opportunities, a better life and reunification with family
members in the United States. While in Mexican territory, tens of thousands of
these migrants fall victim to abuse, robbery, kidnapping and rape at the hands
of thieves, gangs, and even corrupt officials. The Mexican Human Rights
Commission (CNDH) has estimated that over 20,000 migrants
are kidnapped each year and over 75% of these crimes go unreported.
According to Amnesty International, six out of every
10 women who enter Mexico as migrants fall victim to sexual
abuse and assault.
Caravan participants publicly denounced the kidnapping,
killing, and rape of migrants in Mexico and demanded that
the Mexican government take definitive action to put an end to this
violence. While the Mexican Congress did pass a new Migration
Law with the purported aim of decriminalizing migration in the
country and ensuring migrant safety, civil society organizations are highly
skeptical that this law will bring meaningful change as it continues to advance
the characterization of migrants as possible threats to national
security.
Ana is far from alone. As the Caravan made
its way from the Guatemala-Mexico border to Mexico City, traveling by bus along
the route that countless migrants have followed in their northward journeys, it
made stops in cities and towns that have been sites of some of the most extreme
violence against migrants in recent years. At each stop, hundreds of Caravans
participants held protests, press conferences, and other actions, telling their
personal stories of violence endured and demanding that authorities’ take concrete
action to halt the suffering and exploitation of migrants.
As Ana herself put it, after describing her
kidnapping at a press conference in downtown Tapachula, Chiapas, “I’ve come
here to demand justice, for all Hondurans, Salvadorans, and Guatemalans. I ask
the president of Mexico, and everyone in the government: please don’t ignore
us; we need your support. There needs to be an end to the violence. No more
discrimination! No more abuse! And no more deaths!”
*Name has been changed.

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