Pressured by the demands of civil society organizations and over 15 thousand migrants and in the context of the Summit of the Americas, the INM announces it will deliver documents to the caravan now moving from Tapachula to the U.S. border.

Pressured by the demands of civil society organizations and over 15 thousand migrants and in the context of the Summit of the Americas, the INM announces it will deliver documents to the caravan now moving from Tapachula to the U.S. border.
With their feet torn up, under the sun and rain, hundreds of migrants from Haiti, Venezuela, Cuba, Central America and other nationalities continued the caravan that left last Saturday from the city of Tapachula, a place where some have stayed for more than a year, without work and awaiting the Mexican government’s response to their requests for asylum. The Mexican immigration system, they say, has collapsed.