The residents demanded the migrants leave Tijuana, sang the Mexican national anthem and shouted, “Mexico!” as caravan participants were taken to shelters, according to press reports and videos on social media.
Fr. Andres Ramirez, director of Caritas Mexico in the Archdiocese of Tijuana, said such rough receptions were not the rule in Tijuana as the border city has a history of welcoming migrants and incorporating them into the community.
“Tijuana is a city of migrants,” he said.
Ramirez attributed the hostility to Tijuana being the final stop prior to caravan participants hoping to cross into the U.S. to seek asylum. Some may have decided to stay in Tijuana, where factory work is abundant. How long the migrants stay in Tijuana remains uncertain as 3,140 people already are waiting to file asylum claims. U.S. Customs and Border Patrol has been processing only 90 requests per day, according to press reports.
The Archdiocese of Tijuana and religious organizations, including the Scalabrinian order, operate shelters for migrants in the region. The facilities have filled with deportees in recent years, Ramirez said, meaning the archdiocese had little space to offer the caravan.
Still, the archdiocese has opened collection centres and held a collection at Masses Nov. 18.
The caravan departed San Pedro Sula, Honduras, Oct. 12, pushing past closed borders and police roadblocks and winding its way some 4,300 kilometres through Mexico to Tijuana.
Its improbable progress prompted more Central Americans seeking an escape from the poverty and violence of the central triangle countries — El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala — to form caravans for safety and support.
Two more caravans were transiting central Mexico as of Nov. 16.
Caravans have been preferred by the migrants because they cut out the cost of hiring a smuggler, known as a coyote, whose fees now range between $8,000 and $13,000, said Rick Jones, youth and migration advisor at Catholic Relief Services in El Salvador.
Ironically, impatient migrants raced ahead of the pack as the caravan reached Mexico City, preferring to reach the border rapidly rather than to rest. Mexican officials did not impede their progress and some state governments provided buses — something done less for altruistic reasons than to move the migrants through their states quickly, according to observers accompanying the caravan.
Ramirez said of some of those early arrivals in Tijuana, “They didn’t want to stay in shelters. They wanted to cross into the United States by whatever means possible.”
Media photos showed some migrants climbing the border wall in the Playas de Tijuana area, where the border fence crosses the beach and extends into the ocean.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection has bolstered patrols and fortified a fence separating Playas de Tijuana and the U.S. by installing razor wire.
“There are soldiers out there. That’s not normal,” Ramirez said.
The rough reception in Tijuana and anti-caravan comments on social media show Mexico’s mixed feelings on immigration.
Javier Urbano, a professor at the Jesuit-run Iberoamercan University in Mexico City, said less than one per cent of the Mexican population is foreign-born and the overwhelming majority of those are originally from the U.S., Canada and Europe.