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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
World
Maya Averbuch and Carolina Gonzalez

Fire at migrant center on US-Mexico border kills at least 40

A fire that killed 40 migrants who were about to be deported from Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, highlights the increasing tension over that country's continued crackdown on migrants trying to reach the United States.

The blaze on Monday night, one of the deadliest in recent history at the Mexico-U.S. border, was provoked by Venezuelan and Central American migrants in a facility in the city bordering Texas, President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said Tuesday morning. The fire was started slightly before 10 p.m. in the center for adults, the National Migration Institute said in a statement.

“This had to do with a protest that they started when they realized that they were going to be deported, moved, and as a protest they put cots in the door of the shelter and they set them on fire,” said AMLO, as the president is known, at a press briefing. “It’s very sad that this has happened.”

Another 28 migrants were injured by the fire and were transferred to local hospitals, some in serious condition, the statement added. The severe injuries and burns are making the process of identifying victims more complicated, said Venezuela’s Ambassador in Mexico Francisco Arias Cardenas.

Guatemala’s migration office said in a statement that at least 28 of the victims were from that country. Mexico’s attorney general’s office reported that an Ecuadorian, Colombian, Salvadorans, Guatemalans, Hondurans and Venezuelans were all in the facility. The dead have yet to be identified by name, Lopez Obrador said.

White House National Security Council spokesperson Adrienne Watson said in a tweet that the U.S. was ready to provide any support needed to Mexico and she wrote, “Our prayers are with those who lost their lives, their loved ones, and those still fighting for their lives.”

In 2022, Mexico’s immigration authorities returned more than 100,000 people to their countries of origin. The majority were from Central America but in recent years, Mexico has seen a growing number of people traveling from other countries, ranging from Haiti to Ecuador, with some arriving from as far as India and Russia.

In 2020, a protest and a fire in an immigration facility in Tenosique, in southern Mexico, also left one migrant dead after the people inside were unable to escape.

(Fabiola Zerpa and Patricia Laya contributed to this story.)

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