The wait is over
A thousand people, mostly Haitians, said enough and started a new caravan from Tapachula. They had been stranded for months, without a stable job, paying impossible rents and waiting for a response to their asylum requests. Patience has limits.
No job, no options
Economic pressure was the trigger. Without access to formal jobs and with families to support, many chose to move. Central and South Americans joined the group. They all share the same vulnerability.
“We couldn’t continue there. Without income, without decent conditions,” said Jerry Gabriel, a 29-year-old Haitian.
The supervised tour
They advance along the roads of Chiapas under the gaze of the National Guard and the National Immigration Institute. It’s not a walk. It is a route marked by operations that have already broken up previous caravans in Chiapas and Oaxaca.
David: caravan number 18
This mobilization is called “David.” It is the eighteenth to leave the southern border since Claudia Sheinbaum took office. The authorities have experience in deactivating them, but the migrants also learned to insist.
The asylum bottleneck
According to the Mexican Commission for Aid to Refugees, Haitians accumulated more than 127 thousand applications between 2020 and 2024. The processes are slow. Meanwhile, many are trying to settle in other cities while waiting for a yes or no.




