mains willing to support migrants who enter the country and respect its laws. The migrants are generally fleeing poverty and insecurity in Honduras, where powerful street gangs rule their turf with brutal violence. With a homicide rate of 43 per 100,000 citizens, Honduras is one of the most violent countries in the world. Chaotic scenes “We’re staying here until they open this fence,” said Adonai Sanchez, 36, who was traveling with his three nephews, aged two, three and 14. Others returned to the Guatemalan side late Friday, where shelters have been providing them food and water. The scene remained tense at the final border barrier, a tall fence of white metal bars. Chanting “Yes we can!” and “Mexico! Mexico!” migrants earlier climbed or tore down a series of barriers, flooding across the bridge. The migrants could be seen passing babies overhead through the crowd, as women holding crying children by the hand or pressing their infants to their chests streamed past the broken metal barriers and onto the bridge. At the front of the caravan, one group briefly broke through the final fence before police forced them back and closed it again. Some migrants used a rope to jump off the bridge and swim across the river or hitch a ride on the many rafts that cross it regularly. Defying Trump’s threats Various caravans had been traveling by bus or on foot from Honduras, converging in recent days on the town of Tecun Uman, Guatemala, near the border bridge. Authorities in Ciudad Hidalgo, on the Mexican side, were expecting around 3,000 migrants to arrive in total. Back in Honduras, hundreds marched in the capital Tegucigalpa in solidarity with their compatriots. On Thursday, Trump branded the migrant caravan an “onslaught” and an “assault on our country” in a series of typically fiery tweets. He threatened to cut aid to the region, deploy the military and close the US-Mexican border if authorities did not stop them. ‘American sovereignty’ In Mexico City, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said after meeting his Mexican counterpart that migration across the two countries’ border is reaching “a moment of crisis” and posing “a challenge for American sovereignty.” Mexican Foreign Minister Luis Videgaray insisted Mexico would not cave to pressure to detain the migrants, urging the Trump administration to address the root causes of their northward flight: violent crime and poverty. “Mexico’s migration policy is for Mexico to decide,” he said. But Mexico has also been keen to show Trump it is working to slow the stream of migrants. The Republican billionaire has made curbing undocumented immigration a keystone of his presidency. Barely a week goes by without him warning about the danger posed by ultra-violent Central American gangs like MS-13, while chants of “build the wall” are a staple of his campaign rallies ahead of next month’s US midterm elections. Published in Daily Times, October 21st 2018.