Central American migrants arrive in Tijuana
A second group of Central American migrants -- part of a larger
"caravan" traveling through Mexico -- arrived in Tijuana on Tuesday to
seek asylum in the United States.

Some 350 people arrived on buses in the city directly across the border
from San Diego. It is the second group to arrive there since Sunday,
when about 80 LGBTQ migrants arrived by bus.
The caravan, which primarily includes people from Guatemala, Honduras
and El Salvador, began with about 120 people and grew to about 7,000 at
its peak, United Nations figures indicate. Groups have splintered off in
recent days after pooling resources for transportation, some seeking
different ports of entry. Another two, smaller groups also were en route
north through Mexico.
The group arrived in Mexico City last week and voted to walk toward
Tijuana, a longer and safer route compared to a shorter trek across the
Rio Grande into Texas.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection said it planned to close northbound
lanes at the San Isidro and Otay Mesa border crossings, both near
Tijuana, in advance of the arrival of the migrants.
The LGBTQ group arranged for Airbnb accommodations in Tijuana, while
religious groups were working to shelter the larger group that arrived
Tuesday, and the thousands of others expected in the coming days.
Legal aid groups told KFMB-TV in San Diego there's a waiting list of
about 2,500 people attempting to claim asylum at the border there, with a
wait time that could take up to 60 days.
On Friday, President Donald Trump signed a proclamation preventing
people who cross the southern border illegally from asking for asylum.
Those who do cross illegally, will be held until deportation, ending the
"release" portion of the United States' so-called "catch and release"
policy in which illegal border crossers are arrested and then released
pending a future court date.
The Department of Defense has deployed some 5,800 U.S. troops to various
locations along border with Mexico ahead of the arrival of the Central
American migrants. On Oct. 31, Trump said the number of troops could
increase to 10,000 to 15,000, on par with the 14,000 deployed to
Afghanistan.
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