A massive caravan consisting of thousands of migrants making its way to the U.S.-Mexico border will soon be joined by hundreds more who left the southern Mexican city of Tapachula on Sunday.
Reuters reported that the larger caravan, consisting of a reported 7,000 people, is currently stopped just north of Tapachula in the town Huixtla. The group left from Tapachula six days ago and will be joined by the smaller group of what is estimated to consist of "hundreds" of more migrants.
Most of the migrants hail from Cuba, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras and Venezuela.
"I think 3.4 months is too long to wait to get a humanitarian visa, to be able to travel through Mexican territory," Selma Alvarez of Venezuela told Reuters.
She added that migrants heading north are at the mercy of criminals, so traveling in caravans "seems safer."
Alvarez also said the group was impatient and wanted to get to the border, so its members could begin the process of entering the U.S. with appointments made using the U.S. government app, CBP One, and to request asylum.
Caravans have been a regular feature at the border in recent years, heading to the border in both the Trump and Biden administrations.
They often break up on their way to the border, with migrants either seeking relief in Mexico or moving to the U.S. border to seek entry in smaller groups. But the images of the enormous numbers of people heading to the border offer a snapshot of how many have surged into the U.S. under the Biden administration.
Republicans, who have accused the Biden administration of fueling the crisis with its rollback of Trump-era border policies and releases of migrants into the U.S. interior, blamed the latest caravan on the Biden administration.
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