Pregnant woman deported to Mexico instead of her country of origin
Expecting and deported to wrong country
MEXICALI, B.C. (KYMA, KECY) - In the Refugio Migrante shelter in Mexicali lives Gloria Mejia, a pregnant 22-year-old refugee from Honduras who from upon arrival to the Yuma was deported to Mexico.
“At the fence, they called me and took me to the dog pound that's what we call it and then they took me and they told me they were going to deport me and I thought it was to my country, but no then when I got off the bus I was in San Luis and they told me I was in Immigration in San Luis and I had no choice to sleep there on the street, because I had left with no money,” said Gloria Mejia.
In March, the U.S. government announced people who crossed the border unlawfully would immediately be sent back to protect public health.
The U.S. has sent over 20,000 migrants to Mexico. About a third of them are Central Americans.
“Its a trauma that difficult to overcome when you have a dream to cross to another county and you have already completed the trip, many times you have to walk 3 or 4 days by the desert and you get to a city and immigration gets you and sends you back its a trauma that is really hard to overcome,” said Juan Luis Gutierrez, Director of Operations.
Honduras is still considered one of the most dangerous countries in the world due to gang violence and corruption.
Gloria left Honduras with nothing but the clothes on her back and dreams of being safe.
“The road to get here is really rough you suffer going on that train being hungry, cold risking your life catching that train at 1 am you’re chasing after that train, tired risking your life its a big risk so for me that's being the hardest part going on such tough roads.”
Gloria says she still has dreams of making it to the U.S. so her baby doesn’t suffer what she did.