Mexico saves 147 US-bound migrants

  • 31/07/2017
Human trafficking
Earlier this month, 10 people died and 29 were hospitalised after over 100 illegal immigrants were packed into an over-heated tractor trailer. Photo credit: Reuters

Mexican authorities have rescued 147 Central Americans abandoned in the wilderness of Veracruz state, after suspected human smugglers forced them out of the cramped tractor trailer they were travelling in on their way to the United States.

The migrants, 74 from Honduras, 59 from Guatemala, 13 from El Salvador and one from Nicaragua were in the back of the poorly ventilated vehicle as they travelled to the border state of Tamaulipas, where they would eventually be smuggled into the United States, Mexico's national immigration institute said.

Among those rescued were 48 minors, including 14 travelling without an adult companion.

They were abandoned near a highway in the city of Ozuluama, Veracruz.

Earlier this month, 10 people died and 29 were hospitalised after more than 100 illegal immigrants were packed into a stifling tractor trailer for a 240 kilometre drive from the US-Mexico border to San Antonio, where survivors spilled out into a Walmart parking lot in the Texas city.

"According to the testimony of migrants, the alleged traffickers, who used the Veracruz-Tampico route in order to reach the United States, abandoned the migrants in the wilderness, where they were forced to hide in the bushes without food or water", the immigration institute said.

Personnel from the immigration institute gave medical attention, food and water to the rescued Central Americans and contacted their respective embassies.

Plagued by gang violence and poverty, the trio of Central American nations send the bulk of migrants entering the United States illegally.

Turf wars between gangs have sparked a surge in violence in Mexico in the past 18 months, also raising the incentive for some young Mexicans to risk the crossing.

Reuters