Thứ Tư, 20 tháng 2, 2019

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Did you know the Underground Railroad passed through the Rio Grande Valley?

Instead of heading north,

some escaped slaves headed to Mexico,

which had abolished slavery

more than 30 years before the Civil War in the U.S. started.

Those who were already in Texas and serving on plantations in East Texas

already had knowledge of pathways of how to get down to the border

as they were shepherding the plantation owners' cotton

down to the ports down here.

The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley's

Community Historical Archaeology Project with Schools learned

escaped slaves heading to Mexico knew of families who could help them.

They knew of the Webbers.

They knew of the Jacksons.

Both ranches had ferry landings on their property,

which made it easy for them to shepherd these escaped slaves

over the river, across over into Mexico.

But what's really interesting about these two particular families

is that they both had white husbands and emancipated black slave wives.

Just like others who were part of the Underground Railroad,

these families faced risks because of the Fugitive Slave Act,

which allowed the capture of escaped slaves

and punishment of those aiding them.

There were plenty of folks out there who were afraid

this fugitive slave act would would cause them harm.

While reaching Mexico was the original destination for escaped slaves,

not everyone made the final trip across the Rio Grande.

Some of them didn't actually go all the way over the border.

They liked it here so much they stayed.

A church and two cemeteries in San Juan

where members of the Jackson family were buried

are the few remnants of this part of Rio Grande Valley history.

There really aren't any primary sources left behind

like letters or documents stating that somebody participated

in this activity because it was secret.

So it's up to us as historians and those who are trying

to piece together this story

to dig deep and uncover items and stitch together the story.

A film and presentation about this research will be shared during FESTIBA.

You can find the schedule online at U-T-R-G-V dot E-D-U slash festiba.

(swoosh)

(swoosh)

For more infomation >> UTRGV researchers uncovering South Texas's part in the Underground Railroad - Duration: 2:26.

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Cold Rain, Storms Move Through North Texas - Duration: 2:32.

For more infomation >> Cold Rain, Storms Move Through North Texas - Duration: 2:32.

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Abandoned courthouse, jail is all that is left of Frio Town, Texas - Duration: 2:33.

For more infomation >> Abandoned courthouse, jail is all that is left of Frio Town, Texas - Duration: 2:33.

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Texas Father Slapped 12-Year-Old Who He Said Bullied His Stepdaughter On Valentine's Day, Police Say - Duration: 0:37.

For more infomation >> Texas Father Slapped 12-Year-Old Who He Said Bullied His Stepdaughter On Valentine's Day, Police Say - Duration: 0:37.

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LULAC takes Texas to court over voter list - Duration: 1:42.

For more infomation >> LULAC takes Texas to court over voter list - Duration: 1:42.

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Texas cotton - Duration: 1:28:27.

For more infomation >> Texas cotton - Duration: 1:28:27.

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"100 Years of News" at West Texas A&M University - Duration: 3:00.

For more infomation >> "100 Years of News" at West Texas A&M University - Duration: 3:00.

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Trump prevails as Mexican officials stop caravan at Texas border and ship migrants to other cities - Duration: 3:09.

Trump prevails as Mexican officials stop caravan at Texas border and ship migrants to other cities

Last week, a caravan of 1,800 Central American migrants arrived in this isolated Mexican border city, where police ushered them into a makeshift government shelter at a shuttered factory surrounded by chain link fence.

As conditions at the shelter deteriorated, riots erupted last Wednesday. Migrants broke through security barriers and struggled with guards. Some threw pipes, tables, chairs and parts of a tent at Mexican officers. Migrant advocates and reporters were barred from the facility, which was surrounded by dozens of federal police in riot gear.

On the other side of the Rio Grande, in the sleepy town of Eagle Pass, Texas, 250 troops and scores of Border Patrol agents were sent to shore up defenses as President Trump vowed to stop this latest caravan.

For the moment, Trump appears to have gotten his way.

As of Tuesday, the shelter was closing, with all but one group of migrant family members sent to other, larger border cities, where prospects of entering the United States were little better.

The last 18 migrants would be allowed to seek asylum at the border bridge to Texas, officials said. Speaking through the shelter fence Tuesday, some said they had proof, including photos, that they were fleeing persecution. It wasnt clear why they were chosen, while others were not allowed to reach the citys two border bridges across the Rio Grande. But a Honduran official said the overall group of 1,800 was simply too large for U.S. officials to process there.

There isnt space, said Jose Carlos Ponce, the Honduran consul in Saltillo who was at the shelter Tuesday.

U.S. officials have said they generally process 15 asylum seekers a day at Eagle Pass, but increased that to about 20 after the caravan arrived.

Local officials in Piedras Negras paid to bus most of the caravan travelers to larger Mexican cities, including Juarez, Hermosillo, Monterrey and Reynosa, according to a psychologist with Doctors Without Borders, which was on hand to provide healthcare. Juarez and Reynosa are on the border across from the Texas cities of El Paso and Hidalgo, respectively. Hermosillo and Monterrey are in the Mexican interior.

Theres a list of sites. They decide, said the psychologist, Yovanna Lopez, as she sat outside the shelter where she had been treating migrants for nearly a week.

It wasnt clear how many were leaving by choice.

I dont want to leave, Merlin Linares Rodriguez, 23, said late Monday.

The Salvadoran single mother was traveling with son Jose Garcia Linares, 7, to join a friend in San Francisco.

We tried to do it legally. They just tell us its not allowed, she said, and began to cry as she sat by the side of the road opposite the shelter, hoping for a ride to the river where she would try to cross illegally.

When officials started allowing migrants to leave the shelter for short periods this week, Linares said she saw some asylum seekers attempt to cross the border bridges.

They tear up your visa, she said of Mexican officials stationed at the bridges.

Leyli Rodriguez, 26, fled Nicaragua with her two cousins to join her sister in Midland, Texas, but said Mexican officials at the shelter told them U.S. holding areas for asylum seekers were full.

They said we can go to Reynosa, but we dont want to. Its dangerous. We could get kidnapped, she said. This is the safest place to be on the border.

The migrants will probably join swelling waiting lists of asylum seekers as the U.S. expands a new policy after applying for asylum. Already, other asylum seekers have been , and Trump administration officials said they planned to expand the policy to Piedras Negras.

Piedras Negras population 150,000 and its sister city, Eagle Pass population 28,000 , fit a familiar pattern on the border: The Mexican city dwarfs its U.S. counterpart. Eagle Pass is an outpost, a setting for the films No Country for Old Men and Lone Star. Below the border bridges is a golf course, where carts passed a dozen Border Patrol trucks Tuesday. Neither city has the immigrant advocacy groups found in other border communities such as Brownsville, El Paso or San Diego.

In those cities, U.S. lawyers have volunteered to accompany migrants seeking asylum at border bridges, assisting them if authorities attempt to bar them from entering. But migrants at the Piedras Negras shelter said no lawyers were allowed into the shelter to help them seek asylum.

Outside the shelter, uniformed Mexican immigration officials sat at tables with laptops issuing temporary identification cards and visas that allowed the Central Americans to travel within the country, some for just a few weeks.

If they try to cross illegally, the card is void, said Manuel Gamez Reyes, a spokesman for the city stationed at the shelter.

About 300 of the migrants were granted permission to stay and work in Mexico, he said. The rest had to relocate. He acknowledged that most of the migrants were fleeing violence in Central America. But he said cities like his cant help them.

This is not a permanent shelter, Gamez said, gesturing to a pile of scores of pallets in the parking lot outside that migrants had been given so they could sleep on the factory floor.

It would cost the city dollar 260,000 to operate the shelter for a month, including food, staff and utilities, he said. Hes been working 12 hour days.

Gamez remembered feeling relieved when the first caravan went to Tijuana in December. This group moved more rapidly, he said, with help from municipal officials in Mexicos interior.

Nobody wants them in their cities because its a lot of spending, he said. Its better for us if they leave. Were a small city. We cant afford the costs.

The buses were a Catch 22 for some of the migrants, a return to cities where they already failed to cross.

Francisco Banegas, 29, said he joined the caravan to Piedras Negras after being deported to his native Honduras during the December caravan to Tijuana. The construction worker and father of four left the shelter this week with a temporary visa hoping to find work to save the dollar 6,000 he estimates hell need to pay a smuggler to get him across the Rio Grande illegally.

What else am I supposed to do? he said.

Luci Herrera Castillo said she fled Honduras with her two children after her 14 year old daughter was raped last fall and the rapists father, a neighbor, threatened them. A single mother who worked doing washing and ironing, Herrera has another daughter she hoped to join in San Jose.

I want to present myself at the bridge, but they wont let me, she said of officials at the shelter. They say we have to go.

She planned to try her luck crossing the river illegally without a smuggler, whom she couldnt afford. On Sunday night, she said, 20 migrants disappeared from the shelter, probably bound for the river.

Were the last because we dont have money to cross the river, said Yolanda Castaneda, a Honduran traveling with her 2 year old son, Nemar, to join a friend in Kansas.

Castaneda, 26, knew the river passage was dangerous. On Thursday, Border Patrol agents found the body of a man floating near one of the border bridges. But she and Nemar would not be boarding the buses. They would try to cross the river, she said, even though her son didnt know how to swim. By Tuesday, they were gone.

For more infomation >> Trump prevails as Mexican officials stop caravan at Texas border and ship migrants to other cities - Duration: 3:09.

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Pamela - Texas Dental Solutions - Dr. Bruce Barbash - Duration: 2:02.

For more infomation >> Pamela - Texas Dental Solutions - Dr. Bruce Barbash - Duration: 2:02.

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Texas Collection at Baylor to honor Doris Miller - Duration: 0:26.

For more infomation >> Texas Collection at Baylor to honor Doris Miller - Duration: 0:26.

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The sun returns to SE Texas Wednesday Afternoon - Duration: 2:26.

For more infomation >> The sun returns to SE Texas Wednesday Afternoon - Duration: 2:26.

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Teen nearly dies while trying to take perfect selfie on a Texas bridge - Daily News - Duration: 3:03.

A Texas teen who nearly died in November while trying to take the perfect selfie on a bridge has opened up about miraculously surviving the dreadful accident

 Triston Bailey, 18, was on his way back from a Dallas Stars hockey game when he and some friends pulled over to take photos on the Margaret McDermott Bridge

While trying to take the selfie with the skyline of Dallas behind him, Triston lost his footing while walking over concrete barriers and fell nearly 50-feet below the bridge

Triston, who doesn't remember anything about the fall, said his friends told him that they heard him scream but 'thought I was joking and that I was trying to mess with them that I fell'

'But then they said they looked over and just like the movies, I'm just laid out there on the dirt,' he told Fox 4

His friends called 911 and paramedics rushed him to Methodist Dallas Medical Center

According to the center, Triston broke his pelvis, fractured his ribs, and lacerated his spleen

  Share this article Share 'Orthopedic trauma surgeon Dr Edgar Araiza and the team at Methodist Dallas put Triston back together,' according to a post on the center's Facebook page

 However, doctors were surprised that his injuries weren't worse. 'One more turn or one more twist, it's amazing he didn't snap his neck,' Dr Jospeh Darryl Amos told Fox 4

  'It's amazing he's not a paraplegic or broke his back or he could've hit a stone in the middle of that field and fractured his skull and not been here

This is a constellation of miraculous little events that occurred.' Triston is now on the road to recovery and is required to do physical therapy twice a week

He's also sharing his story in hopes that others will learn from his experience.'If I see another person on I-30 about to take a picture, I just stop on the side like, 'Hey, it's not a good idea,' Triston told the station

  Once he's fully recovered, Triston has hopes to join the Air Force.     

For more infomation >> Teen nearly dies while trying to take perfect selfie on a Texas bridge - Daily News - Duration: 3:03.

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Bill Vessey's Forecast for South Texas for Wednesday, February 20, 2019 - Duration: 3:28.

For more infomation >> Bill Vessey's Forecast for South Texas for Wednesday, February 20, 2019 - Duration: 3:28.

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The Process of Home Inspection in Austin texas Call (512)9573963 for more information - Duration: 1:05.

The process of home inspection Austin texas

The home inspector will evaluate

the roofing

built-in appliances

site drainage

The windows

The fences

The stairs

fireplaces

plumbing

electrical system

And much more

all these details will be written in the report for the buyer to review

With this information, the buyer will decide on whether to purchase the home or not

For more infomation >> The Process of Home Inspection in Austin texas Call (512)9573963 for more information - Duration: 1:05.

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Homeschooling numbers increase in Texas - Duration: 1:28.

For more infomation >> Homeschooling numbers increase in Texas - Duration: 1:28.

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Trump prevails as Mexican officials stop caravan at Texas border and ship migrants to other cities - Duration: 5:59.

Trump prevails as Mexican officials stop caravan at Texas border and ship migrants to other cities

Last week, a caravan of 1,800 Central American migrants arrived in this isolated Mexican border city, where police ushered them into a makeshift government shelter at a shuttered factory surrounded by chain link fence.

As conditions at the shelter deteriorated, riots erupted last Wednesday. Migrants broke through security barriers and struggled with guards. Some threw pipes, tables, chairs and parts of a tent at Mexican officers. Migrant advocates and reporters were barred from the facility, which was surrounded by dozens of federal police in riot gear.

On the other side of the Rio Grande, in the sleepy town of Eagle Pass, Texas, 250 troops and scores of Border Patrol agents were sent to shore up defenses as President Trump vowed to stop this latest caravan.

For the moment, Trump appears to have gotten his way.

As of Tuesday, the shelter was closing, with all but one group of migrant family members sent to other, larger border cities, where prospects of entering the United States were little better.

The last 18 migrants would be allowed to seek asylum at the border bridge to Texas, officials said. Speaking through the shelter fence Tuesday, some said they had proof, including photos, that they were fleeing persecution. It wasnt clear why they were chosen, while others were not allowed to reach the citys two border bridges across the Rio Grande. But a Honduran official said the overall group of 1,800 was simply too large for U.S. officials to process there.

There isnt space, said Jose Carlos Ponce, the Honduran consul in Saltillo who was at the shelter Tuesday.

U.S. officials have said they generally process 15 asylum seekers a day at Eagle Pass, but increased that to about 20 after the caravan arrived.

Local officials in Piedras Negras paid to bus most of the caravan travelers to larger Mexican cities, including Juarez, Hermosillo, Monterrey and Reynosa, according to a psychologist with Doctors Without Borders, which was on hand to provide healthcare. Juarez and Reynosa are on the border across from the Texas cities of El Paso and Hidalgo, respectively. Hermosillo and Monterrey are in the Mexican interior.

Theres a list of sites. They decide, said the psychologist, Yovanna Lopez, as she sat outside the shelter where she had been treating migrants for nearly a week.

It wasnt clear how many were leaving by choice.

I dont want to leave, Merlin Linares Rodriguez, 23, said late Monday.

The Salvadoran single mother was traveling with son Jose Garcia Linares, 7, to join a friend in San Francisco.

We tried to do it legally. They just tell us its not allowed, she said, and began to cry as she sat by the side of the road opposite the shelter, hoping for a ride to the river where she would try to cross illegally.

When officials started allowing migrants to leave the shelter for short periods this week, Linares said she saw some asylum seekers attempt to cross the border bridges.

They tear up your visa, she said of Mexican officials stationed at the bridges.

Leyli Rodriguez, 26, fled Nicaragua with her two cousins to join her sister in Midland, Texas, but said Mexican officials at the shelter told them U.S. holding areas for asylum seekers were full.

They said we can go to Reynosa, but we dont want to. Its dangerous. We could get kidnapped, she said. This is the safest place to be on the border.

The migrants will probably join swelling waiting lists of asylum seekers as the U.S. expands a new policy after applying for asylum. Already, other asylum seekers have been , and Trump administration officials said they planned to expand the policy to Piedras Negras.

Piedras Negras population 150,000 and its sister city, Eagle Pass population 28,000 , fit a familiar pattern on the border: The Mexican city dwarfs its U.S. counterpart. Eagle Pass is an outpost, a setting for the films No Country for Old Men and Lone Star. Below the border bridges is a golf course, where carts passed a dozen Border Patrol trucks Tuesday. Neither city has the immigrant advocacy groups found in other border communities such as Brownsville, El Paso or San Diego.

In those cities, U.S. lawyers have volunteered to accompany migrants seeking asylum at border bridges, assisting them if authorities attempt to bar them from entering. But migrants at the Piedras Negras shelter said no lawyers were allowed into the shelter to help them seek asylum.

Outside the shelter, uniformed Mexican immigration officials sat at tables with laptops issuing temporary identification cards and visas that allowed the Central Americans to travel within the country, some for just a few weeks.

If they try to cross illegally, the card is void, said Manuel Gamez Reyes, a spokesman for the city stationed at the shelter.

About 300 of the migrants were granted permission to stay and work in Mexico, he said. The rest had to relocate. He acknowledged that most of the migrants were fleeing violence in Central America. But he said cities like his cant help them.

This is not a permanent shelter, Gamez said, gesturing to a pile of scores of pallets in the parking lot outside that migrants had been given so they could sleep on the factory floor.

It would cost the city dollar 260,000 to operate the shelter for a month, including food, staff and utilities, he said. Hes been working 12 hour days.

Gamez remembered feeling relieved when the first caravan went to Tijuana in December. This group moved more rapidly, he said, with help from municipal officials in Mexicos interior.

Nobody wants them in their cities because its a lot of spending, he said. Its better for us if they leave. Were a small city. We cant afford the costs.

The buses were a Catch 22 for some of the migrants, a return to cities where they already failed to cross.

Francisco Banegas, 29, said he joined the caravan to Piedras Negras after being deported to his native Honduras during the December caravan to Tijuana. The construction worker and father of four left the shelter this week with a temporary visa hoping to find work to save the dollar 6,000 he estimates hell need to pay a smuggler to get him across the Rio Grande illegally.

What else am I supposed to do? he said.

Luci Herrera Castillo said she fled Honduras with her two children after her 14 year old daughter was raped last fall and the rapists father, a neighbor, threatened them. A single mother who worked doing washing and ironing, Herrera has another daughter she hoped to join in San Jose.

I want to present myself at the bridge, but they wont let me, she said of officials at the shelter. They say we have to go.

She planned to try her luck crossing the river illegally without a smuggler, whom she couldnt afford. On Sunday night, she said, 20 migrants disappeared from the shelter, probably bound for the river.

Were the last because we dont have money to cross the river, said Yolanda Castaneda, a Honduran traveling with her 2 year old son, Nemar, to join a friend in Kansas.

Castaneda, 26, knew the river passage was dangerous. On Thursday, Border Patrol agents found the body of a man floating near one of the border bridges. But she and Nemar would not be boarding the buses. They would try to cross the river, she said, even though her son didnt know how to swim. By Tuesday, they were gone.

For more infomation >> Trump prevails as Mexican officials stop caravan at Texas border and ship migrants to other cities - Duration: 5:59.

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What's the cost of football helmets? A guideline from Central Texas coaches - Duration: 4:17.

For more infomation >> What's the cost of football helmets? A guideline from Central Texas coaches - Duration: 4:17.

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Trump prevails as Mexican officials stop caravan at Texas border and ship migrants to other cities - Duration: 5:54.

Trump prevails as Mexican officials stop caravan at Texas border and ship migrants to other cities

Last week, a caravan of 1,800 Central American migrants arrived in this isolated Mexican border city, where police ushered them into a makeshift government shelter at a shuttered factory surrounded by chain link fence.

As conditions at the shelter deteriorated, riots erupted last Wednesday. Migrants broke through security barriers and struggled with guards. Some threw pipes, tables, chairs and parts of a tent at Mexican officers. Migrant advocates and reporters were barred from the facility, which was surrounded by dozens of federal police in riot gear.

On the other side of the Rio Grande, in the sleepy town of Eagle Pass, Texas, 250 troops and scores of Border Patrol agents were sent to shore up defenses as President Trump vowed to stop this latest caravan.

For the moment, Trump appears to have gotten his way.

As of Tuesday, the shelter was closing, with all but one group of migrant family members sent to other, larger border cities, where prospects of entering the United States were little better.

The last 18 migrants would be allowed to seek asylum at the border bridge to Texas, officials said. Speaking through the shelter fence Tuesday, some said they had proof, including photos, that they were fleeing persecution. It wasnt clear why they were chosen, while others were not allowed to reach the citys two border bridges across the Rio Grande. But a Honduran official said the overall group of 1,800 was simply too large for U.S. officials to process there.

There isnt space, said Jose Carlos Ponce, the Honduran consul in Saltillo who was at the shelter Tuesday.

U.S. officials have said they generally process 15 asylum seekers a day at Eagle Pass, but increased that to about 20 after the caravan arrived.

Local officials in Piedras Negras paid to bus most of the caravan travelers to larger Mexican cities, including Juarez, Hermosillo, Monterrey and Reynosa, according to a psychologist with Doctors Without Borders, which was on hand to provide healthcare. Juarez and Reynosa are on the border across from the Texas cities of El Paso and Hidalgo, respectively. Hermosillo and Monterrey are in the Mexican interior.

Theres a list of sites. They decide, said the psychologist, Yovanna Lopez, as she sat outside the shelter where she had been treating migrants for nearly a week.

It wasnt clear how many were leaving by choice.

I dont want to leave, Merlin Linares Rodriguez, 23, said late Monday.

The Salvadoran single mother was traveling with son Jose Garcia Linares, 7, to join a friend in San Francisco.

We tried to do it legally. They just tell us its not allowed, she said, and began to cry as she sat by the side of the road opposite the shelter, hoping for a ride to the river where she would try to cross illegally.

When officials started allowing migrants to leave the shelter for short periods this week, Linares said she saw some asylum seekers attempt to cross the border bridges.

They tear up your visa, she said of Mexican officials stationed at the bridges.

Leyli Rodriguez, 26, fled Nicaragua with her two cousins to join her sister in Midland, Texas, but said Mexican officials at the shelter told them U.S. holding areas for asylum seekers were full.

They said we can go to Reynosa, but we dont want to. Its dangerous. We could get kidnapped, she said. This is the safest place to be on the border.

The migrants will probably join swelling waiting lists of asylum seekers as the U.S. expands a new policy after applying for asylum. Already, other asylum seekers have been , and Trump administration officials said they planned to expand the policy to Piedras Negras.

Piedras Negras population 150,000 and its sister city, Eagle Pass population 28,000 , fit a familiar pattern on the border: The Mexican city dwarfs its U.S. counterpart. Eagle Pass is an outpost, a setting for the films No Country for Old Men and Lone Star. Below the border bridges is a golf course, where carts passed a dozen Border Patrol trucks Tuesday. Neither city has the immigrant advocacy groups found in other border communities such as Brownsville, El Paso or San Diego.

In those cities, U.S. lawyers have volunteered to accompany migrants seeking asylum at border bridges, assisting them if authorities attempt to bar them from entering. But migrants at the Piedras Negras shelter said no lawyers were allowed into the shelter to help them seek asylum.

Outside the shelter, uniformed Mexican immigration officials sat at tables with laptops issuing temporary identification cards and visas that allowed the Central Americans to travel within the country, some for just a few weeks.

If they try to cross illegally, the card is void, said Manuel Gamez Reyes, a spokesman for the city stationed at the shelter.

About 300 of the migrants were granted permission to stay and work in Mexico, he said. The rest had to relocate. He acknowledged that most of the migrants were fleeing violence in Central America. But he said cities like his cant help them.

This is not a permanent shelter, Gamez said, gesturing to a pile of scores of pallets in the parking lot outside that migrants had been given so they could sleep on the factory floor.

It would cost the city dollar 260,000 to operate the shelter for a month, including food, staff and utilities, he said. Hes been working 12 hour days.

Gamez remembered feeling relieved when the first caravan went to Tijuana in December. This group moved more rapidly, he said, with help from municipal officials in Mexicos interior.

Nobody wants them in their cities because its a lot of spending, he said. Its better for us if they leave. Were a small city. We cant afford the costs.

The buses were a Catch 22 for some of the migrants, a return to cities where they already failed to cross.

Francisco Banegas, 29, said he joined the caravan to Piedras Negras after being deported to his native Honduras during the December caravan to Tijuana. The construction worker and father of four left the shelter this week with a temporary visa hoping to find work to save the dollar 6,000 he estimates hell need to pay a smuggler to get him across the Rio Grande illegally.

What else am I supposed to do? he said.

Luci Herrera Castillo said she fled Honduras with her two children after her 14 year old daughter was raped last fall and the rapists father, a neighbor, threatened them. A single mother who worked doing washing and ironing, Herrera has another daughter she hoped to join in San Jose.

I want to present myself at the bridge, but they wont let me, she said of officials at the shelter. They say we have to go.

She planned to try her luck crossing the river illegally without a smuggler, whom she couldnt afford. On Sunday night, she said, 20 migrants disappeared from the shelter, probably bound for the river.

Were the last because we dont have money to cross the river, said Yolanda Castaneda, a Honduran traveling with her 2 year old son, Nemar, to join a friend in Kansas.

Castaneda, 26, knew the river passage was dangerous. On Thursday, Border Patrol agents found the body of a man floating near one of the border bridges. But she and Nemar would not be boarding the buses. They would try to cross the river, she said, even though her son didnt know how to swim. By Tuesday, they were gone.

For more infomation >> Trump prevails as Mexican officials stop caravan at Texas border and ship migrants to other cities - Duration: 5:54.

-------------------------------------------

Trump prevails as Mexican officials stop caravan at Texas border and ship migrants to other cities - Duration: 5:59.

Trump prevails as Mexican officials stop caravan at Texas border and ship migrants to other cities

Last week, a caravan of 1,800 Central American migrants arrived in this isolated Mexican border city, where police ushered them into a makeshift government shelter at a shuttered factory surrounded by chain link fence.

As conditions at the shelter deteriorated, riots erupted last Wednesday. Migrants broke through security barriers and struggled with guards. Some threw pipes, tables, chairs and parts of a tent at Mexican officers. Migrant advocates and reporters were barred from the facility, which was surrounded by dozens of federal police in riot gear.

On the other side of the Rio Grande, in the sleepy town of Eagle Pass, Texas, 250 troops and scores of Border Patrol agents were sent to shore up defenses as President Trump vowed to stop this latest caravan.

For the moment, Trump appears to have gotten his way.

As of Tuesday, the shelter was closing, with all but one group of migrant family members sent to other, larger border cities, where prospects of entering the United States were little better.

The last 18 migrants would be allowed to seek asylum at the border bridge to Texas, officials said. Speaking through the shelter fence Tuesday, some said they had proof, including photos, that they were fleeing persecution. It wasnt clear why they were chosen, while others were not allowed to reach the citys two border bridges across the Rio Grande. But a Honduran official said the overall group of 1,800 was simply too large for U.S. officials to process there.

There isnt space, said Jose Carlos Ponce, the Honduran consul in Saltillo who was at the shelter Tuesday.

U.S. officials have said they generally process 15 asylum seekers a day at Eagle Pass, but increased that to about 20 after the caravan arrived.

Local officials in Piedras Negras paid to bus most of the caravan travelers to larger Mexican cities, including Juarez, Hermosillo, Monterrey and Reynosa, according to a psychologist with Doctors Without Borders, which was on hand to provide healthcare. Juarez and Reynosa are on the border across from the Texas cities of El Paso and Hidalgo, respectively. Hermosillo and Monterrey are in the Mexican interior.

Theres a list of sites. They decide, said the psychologist, Yovanna Lopez, as she sat outside the shelter where she had been treating migrants for nearly a week.

It wasnt clear how many were leaving by choice.

I dont want to leave, Merlin Linares Rodriguez, 23, said late Monday.

The Salvadoran single mother was traveling with son Jose Garcia Linares, 7, to join a friend in San Francisco.

We tried to do it legally. They just tell us its not allowed, she said, and began to cry as she sat by the side of the road opposite the shelter, hoping for a ride to the river where she would try to cross illegally.

When officials started allowing migrants to leave the shelter for short periods this week, Linares said she saw some asylum seekers attempt to cross the border bridges.

They tear up your visa, she said of Mexican officials stationed at the bridges.

Leyli Rodriguez, 26, fled Nicaragua with her two cousins to join her sister in Midland, Texas, but said Mexican officials at the shelter told them U.S. holding areas for asylum seekers were full.

They said we can go to Reynosa, but we dont want to. Its dangerous. We could get kidnapped, she said. This is the safest place to be on the border.

The migrants will probably join swelling waiting lists of asylum seekers as the U.S. expands a new policy after applying for asylum. Already, other asylum seekers have been , and Trump administration officials said they planned to expand the policy to Piedras Negras.

Piedras Negras population 150,000 and its sister city, Eagle Pass population 28,000 , fit a familiar pattern on the border: The Mexican city dwarfs its U.S. counterpart. Eagle Pass is an outpost, a setting for the films No Country for Old Men and Lone Star. Below the border bridges is a golf course, where carts passed a dozen Border Patrol trucks Tuesday. Neither city has the immigrant advocacy groups found in other border communities such as Brownsville, El Paso or San Diego.

In those cities, U.S. lawyers have volunteered to accompany migrants seeking asylum at border bridges, assisting them if authorities attempt to bar them from entering. But migrants at the Piedras Negras shelter said no lawyers were allowed into the shelter to help them seek asylum.

Outside the shelter, uniformed Mexican immigration officials sat at tables with laptops issuing temporary identification cards and visas that allowed the Central Americans to travel within the country, some for just a few weeks.

If they try to cross illegally, the card is void, said Manuel Gamez Reyes, a spokesman for the city stationed at the shelter.

About 300 of the migrants were granted permission to stay and work in Mexico, he said. The rest had to relocate. He acknowledged that most of the migrants were fleeing violence in Central America. But he said cities like his cant help them.

This is not a permanent shelter, Gamez said, gesturing to a pile of scores of pallets in the parking lot outside that migrants had been given so they could sleep on the factory floor.

It would cost the city dollar 260,000 to operate the shelter for a month, including food, staff and utilities, he said. Hes been working 12 hour days.

Gamez remembered feeling relieved when the first caravan went to Tijuana in December. This group moved more rapidly, he said, with help from municipal officials in Mexicos interior.

Nobody wants them in their cities because its a lot of spending, he said. Its better for us if they leave. Were a small city. We cant afford the costs.

The buses were a Catch 22 for some of the migrants, a return to cities where they already failed to cross.

Francisco Banegas, 29, said he joined the caravan to Piedras Negras after being deported to his native Honduras during the December caravan to Tijuana. The construction worker and father of four left the shelter this week with a temporary visa hoping to find work to save the dollar 6,000 he estimates hell need to pay a smuggler to get him across the Rio Grande illegally.

What else am I supposed to do? he said.

Luci Herrera Castillo said she fled Honduras with her two children after her 14 year old daughter was raped last fall and the rapists father, a neighbor, threatened them. A single mother who worked doing washing and ironing, Herrera has another daughter she hoped to join in San Jose.

I want to present myself at the bridge, but they wont let me, she said of officials at the shelter. They say we have to go.

She planned to try her luck crossing the river illegally without a smuggler, whom she couldnt afford. On Sunday night, she said, 20 migrants disappeared from the shelter, probably bound for the river.

Were the last because we dont have money to cross the river, said Yolanda Castaneda, a Honduran traveling with her 2 year old son, Nemar, to join a friend in Kansas.

Castaneda, 26, knew the river passage was dangerous. On Thursday, Border Patrol agents found the body of a man floating near one of the border bridges. But she and Nemar would not be boarding the buses. They would try to cross the river, she said, even though her son didnt know how to swim. By Tuesday, they were gone.

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