Mexican migrant shelters are overflowing after the country’s deal to avert U.S. tariffs. “We hope the government has some kind of alternative.”
TIJUANA, Mexico—The last place Honduran migrant Gustavo Edil Gutiérrez imagined himself was back in Tijuana, living in a shelter and losing hope as he awaits his U.S. asylum hearing across the border.
Mr. Gutiérrez is one of more than 11,000 migrants sent back to Mexico by the U.S. this year to wait for their cases to be heard. Many more will soon be sent by U.S. authorities to six border towns after Mexico agreed this month to take more as part of a deal to ward off President Trump’s threatened tariffs on all Mexican imports.
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