Más Información

Defensa envía tercer vuelo con ayuda humanitaria a Jamaica por huracán "Melissa"; suman más de 38 mil kilos de insumos

Sheinbaum dice que siempre ha rechazado participación de EU contra el narco en México; destaca coordinación en seguridad

Harfuch descarta expansión del Tren de Aragua en México; opera de forma limitada y vinculada a grupos locales

Presión de Estados Unidos a México por fentanilo responde a cálculo electoral; expertos llaman a no desestimar presiones
The number of unaccompanied children entering the United States across the southwest border has dropped sharply from a year ago after action by the U.S. government, U.S. officials said on Tuesday.
In the period from Oct. 1, 2013, to June 30, 2014, the number of unaccompanied minors, mostly from Central America, crossing into the United States reached 57,478, causing humanitarian, political, logistical and diplomatic problems for the Obama administration.
In the same period this year, the number fell by 54 percent to 26,685, U.S. Customs and Border Protection said. Most of the crossings occurred in southern Texas, which posted a nearly 60 percent fall to 17,179 in the period.
Traveling without relatives and often escorted by smugglers, the children created a humanitarian crisis on the border with Mexico, with President Barack Obama taking hits from prominent Republicans who accused him of not doing enough to secure the country.
To contain last year's surge, U.S. authorities opened temporary shelters, reassigned border agents, added processing centers and immigration judges and started Spanish-language campaigns in the countries most of the children were fleeing - El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras.
Last year, then-Texas Governor Rick Perry, now a Republican presidential hopeful, deployed the state's National Guard to the border, a move he said was aimed at boosting border security but critics called an ineffective action aimed at scoring political points.
Noticias según tus intereses
[Publicidad]
[Publicidad]










