The town seeing a staggering change since Trump took office
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Several cities in northern Mexico have observed a significant decrease in the number of migrants attempting to reach the US border following President Donald Trump’s return to the White House.

The Comarca Lagunera region, comprising five cities in Coahuila and ten in Durango, reported a 95 to 97 percent decline in migrants from the south aiming to reach the US by the end of last year, as per a report by Milenio.

In the initial months of 2024, authorities typically encountered groups of up to 800 migrants passing through the area, stated Raul Meraz, the undersecretary for the region.

Meraz recalled that the biggest group in December – the month after Trump was elected on a platform of strict border security and the deportation of illegal migrants – consisted of 120 migrants. 

The group was spotted at an out-of-service train station in Gómez Palacio, more than 300 miles from the US border, and received assistance from multiple government agencies.

Erick López and his family were among the dwindling number of migrants who reached the region.

They left their home in the Honduran capital of Tegucigalpa in hopes of crossing into America.

‘At first the idea was to cross to the other side, but when things got worse with Donald Trump, we decided to stay because I came with my wife and [three] children,’ López told Milenio. 

The city of Torreón in the Comarca Lagunera region, which experienced a 95 to 97 percent drop in migrants from the south trying to reach the US toward the end of 2024

The city of Torreón in the Comarca Lagunera region, which experienced a 95 to 97 percent drop in migrants from the south trying to reach the US toward the end of 2024

A migrant plays with her child at a shelter in Piedras Negras in the state of Coahuila on Saturday

A migrant plays with her child at a shelter in Piedras Negras in the state of Coahuila on Saturday

To support his loved ones, López camps out in the city of Torreón with his two oldest children, seeking donations on a street. 

His wife remains with their youngest child, a baby, at a residence in neighboring Gómez Palacio whose owner has to let them stay there because he had nobody to look after the property.

‘A man is lending us a place to stay. We met him right here [while panhandling],’ López recalled.

‘He told me that he had already seen me a few days ago and he told me that his house was not abandoned, but that he had no one to take care of it. Thank God, the people are very good, the police here too. In the south of Mexico, they have robbed us, but not here.’

María Martínez, coordinating director of the Jesus Torres Fraire Day Center for Migrants in Torreón, said the site normally allows migrants to stay for a couple of nights.

But that has changed as migrants fear being detained by Mexico’s National Guard.

‘…[W]e think that what they are trying to do now is obtain a legal stay,’ Martínez told Milenio.

She attributed to the slowdown in migrant arrivals to the increased presence of the military.

Asylum seekers, who had appointments made through the U.S. Customs and Border Protection CBP One application, waited outside the National Institute of Migration in Piedras Negras

Asylum seekers, who had appointments made through the U.S. Customs and Border Protection CBP One application, waited outside the National Institute of Migration in Piedras Negras

Honduran national Isai Mendez, 13, spent 13 months with his mother and sister waiting for an asylum appointment and were notified on January 21, the day after Donald Trump was inaugurated, that their appointment had been cancelled

Honduran national Isai Mendez, 13, spent 13 months with his mother and sister waiting for an asylum appointment and were notified on January 21, the day after Donald Trump was inaugurated, that their appointment had been cancelled

‘They no longer want to try and are giving themselves up,’ she said. ‘The migratory flow is changing. If we have eight migrants, there are shelters that don’t have even one and you wonder, what is happening, why do people keep leaving their countries?’

Immigration figures provided by the U.S. Customs and Border Protection showed that there were 61,465 interdictions of migrants attempting to cross the border last month, a sharp decrease from December 2024, when 96,048 incidents were registered.

Data showed that in the three weeks before Trump took office, at least 2,000 apprehensions were reported daily. 

In comparison, an average of 786 migrant interdictions were reported following his return to the White House.

According to data obtained by DailyMail.com from Mexico’s National Institute of Migration, 12,254 Mexicans and 3,334 people of other nationalities have been deported to Mexico from the U.S. since Trump took office. 

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