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Hondurans, others forming migrant caravan presently in Guatemala

More than 3,500 Central Americans had poured into Guatemala by Friday in U.S.-bound gatherings known as caravans, officials said, posing a headache for the leaders of Guatemala and Mexico amid fierce U.S. pressure to curb migration.

U.S. struck deals with Mexico, Guatemala after previous caravans to keep claimants south of border

Hondurans walk along a road as they take part in a caravan of migrants heading toward the United States, in Chiquimula on Friday. (Fabricio Alonso/Reuters)

More than 3,500 Central Americans had poured into Guatemala by Friday in U.S.-bound gatherings known as caravans, officials said, posing a headache for the leaders of Guatemala and Mexico amid fierce U.S. pressure to curb migration.

President Donald Trump has repeatedly urged the region to prevent such groups of migrants from reaching Mexico's border with the United States, and the latest exodus from Honduras that began on Wednesday has been accompanied by U.S. border agents.

The migrants, some travelling in groups as small as a dozen people while others formed caravans of more than 100, said they planned to unite at the Guatemalan border city of Tecun Uman before crossing together into Ciudad Hidalgo, Mexico.

Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said his government was monitoring the situation as the migrants approached, saying there were 4,000 jobs available on the southern border, as well as shelters and medical help.

"We are keeping an eye on everything," Lopez Obrador said during a regular press conference.

Lopez Obrador did not say if Mexico would seek to keep the migrants in the southern part of the country. Most Central Americans who leave their countries escaping poverty and violence are eager to make their way toward the United States.

Under U.S. pressure, Mexican security forces have increasingly broken up large groups as they head north.

New president yet to tip his hand on existing pact

On Wednesday, Guatemala's new President Alejandro Giammattei suggested Mexico would prevent any caravans from reaching the United States.

About a thousand migrants entered Guatemala on Thursday, with local officials busing some of the migrants back to the Honduran border to fill out official paperwork, said Alejandra Mena, a spokesperson for Guatemala's migration institute.

"We haven't returned people from Guatemala and we have a total of about 3,543 people who have so far crossed the border," Mena said.

At least 600 Honduran migrants spent the night under tents in a shelter in Guatemala City on Thursday night, sleeping on mattresses.

"Now we have more experience, and we know how to treat them," said Father Mauro Verzeletti, director of the Migrant House shelter in Guatemala City.

Hondurans walk along a road as they take part in the caravan that hopes to reach the United States. (Fabricio Alonso/Reuters)

Migrant caravans are not a recent development to confront U.S. officials, but they've enraged Trump. He made a large caravan heading north in 2018 a centrepiece of his campaigning on behalf of Republicans during that year's midterm election, though ultimately his party lost control of the House of Representatives to the Democrats.

It's unclear what will happen if the migrants reach the southern border to make an asylum claim, or are picked up by patrols attempting to cross between points of entry.

The Trump administration, after a policy of family separation was met with outrage, has moved to implement policies in which increasing numbers wait outside the U.S. while their claims are pending, a process that can take years. As well, refugee advocates argue that Mexico and Guatemala do not meet the definition of safe third countries, due to their rates of violent crime.

Most of the measures have been challenged in the courts, a process that is still ongoing.

Guatemala's former president Jimmy Morales, with weeks left in his term, agreed last July with the U.S. government to implement measures aimed at reducing the number of asylum claims made in the United States by migrants fleeing Honduras and El Salvador, averting Trump's threat of economic sanctions.

New leader Giammattei said a top priority would be reviewing the text of migration agreements made with the United States.

With files from CBC News