Tears flowed amid heartfelt embraces as Mexican families were allowed brief reunions at the US border on Saturday with relatives who migrated to the US.
As a mariachi band played the popular song Las Mananitas, about 150 families passed over the Rio Grande to meet with loved ones they had not seen for years.
Margarita Pina could not hide her emotion as she waited to greet her son, whom she had not seen since he left home two years ago in the middle of the COVID-19 pandemic to seek a better future in the US.
Photo: Reuters
“It’s very hard because we don’t know what they’re suffering over there,” Pina said.
Knowing their meeting would be limited to only five minutes, Pina said she would take advantage of the limited time to tell him “that we still love you very much.”
It was the 10th edition of the “Hugs, not walls” event, which was organized by humanitarian groups near the Casa de Adobe Museum in the border city of Ciudad Juarez, which sprawls across the border from El Paso, Texas.
Unlike at earlier reunions, a strong guard of US officers was present at the event, which came just days before Washington is scheduled to lift Title 42 asylum rules imposed for the pandemic that allowed the US to expel more than 2.8 million migrants since March 2020.
The end to the provision on Thursday is expected to encourage a surge of migrants toward the border, and US authorities have beefed up security, including stringing barbed wire fencing.
The US government has said that 1,500 troops would be sent to El Paso, in addition to 2,500 US National Guard troops already at the border.
“We have never had a border as militarized as today,” said Fernando Garcia, head of the Network in Defense of the Rights of Migrants advocacy group.
“There is a war against migrants, refugees, against us border crossers,” he added.
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