UNICEF / GUATEMALA MEXICO MIGRANT CHILDREN

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More than 12,000 people, including 3,000 children, have crossed from Tecun Uman, Guatemala, to Tapachula, Mexico, since January 17, UNICEF said today. It is critical to uphold special protection for these children, particularly those among them traveling alone, the children’s agency said. UNICEF
Description

STORY: UNICEF / GUATEMALA MEXICO MIGRANT CHILDREN
TRT: 01:52
SOURCE: UNICEF
RESTRICTIONS: PLEASE CREDIT UNICEF FOOTAGE ON SCREEN
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH / NATS

DATELINE: 29 JANUARY 2019, CIUDAD HIDALGO, MEXICO / TECÚN UMÁN, GUATEMALA

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Shotlist

29 JANUARY 2019, UNICEF CHILD FRIENDLY SPACE, TECÚN UMÁN, GUATEMALA

1. Various shots, UNICEF Director of Communication Paloma Escudero interacting with children

29 JANUARY 2019, CIUDAD HIDALGO, MEXICO

2. Various shots, Escudero interacting with children playing football and drawing

29 JANUARY 2019, SUCHIATE RIVER, MEXICO-GUATEMALA BORDER

3. Various shots, migrants waiting, cleaning clothes, migrants crossing both sides of Suchiate bridge, 4. Various shots, images of borders, immigration signs, images of bridge
5. Various shots, rafts crossing Suchiate River from Guatemala to Mexico side of the border
6. SOUNDBITE(English) Paloma Escudero, Director of Communication, UNICEF:
“We are crossing the border between Guatemala and Mexico in the real way. We are really crossing in this little boat, just one minute that separates a past of violence, of poverty, in Guatemala, in Salvador and Honduras, and it opens the door to a legal future for most of them in Mexico and in the North of America.”
7. Wide shot, river

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Storyline

More than 12,000 people, including 3,000 children, have crossed from Tecun Uman, Guatemala, to Tapachula, Mexico, since 17 January, UNICEF said today (30 Jan).

It is critical to uphold special protection for these children, particularly those among them traveling alone, the children’s agency said.

According to government statistics, more than 30,000 children from Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador were temporarily held in detention centres in 2018.

Although Mexico is increasingly implementing measures to safeguard children’s rights while in transit or seeking asylum in the country, challenges persist.

Paloma Escudero, UNICEF Director of Communications visited the border area.

At the Tapachula migration station, which holds close to 1,000 men, women and children, Escudero spoke with mothers and young women kept at the station while their asylum claims or deportation orders are processed.

The new Mexican Government has officially committed to end detention of all child migrants and is presently working to fulfil this new policy. UNICEF and other organizations are closely supporting these efforts by helping develop alternatives to detention.

In Mexico, UNICEF continues to work with the Government and its partners to ensure that migrant children receive the support and services they need and that their rights are upheld. Through its teams in Tapachula,

Crossing the river on a small raft, Escudero said, “we are crossing the border between Guatemala and Mexico in the real way. We are really crossing in this little boat, just one minute that separates a past of violence, of poverty, in Guatemala, in Salvador and Honduras, and it opens the door to a legal future for most of them in Mexico and in the North of America.”

UNICEF is giving direct support to children arriving at the migration office in Ciudad Hidalgo, providing them with information about their migratory options. The children’s agency is also providing direct technical assistance to the Social Welfare Agency and Child Protection Authorities to ensure unaccompanied children are duly processed and receive appropriate care.

UNICEF is advocating with its Government partners to build on the country’s existing successful programmes for children on the move, keeping the best interests of the child above all other considerations.

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UNICEF
Alternate Title
unifeed190130f
Subject Topical
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MAMS Id
2352746
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2352746