Share and Follow
Seven per cent are reportedly from Guatemala, a Central American nation of 17.6 million people, more than half of whom live in poverty.
Almost all of that money was sent by individuals working in the US, followed by small percentages sent from Canada and Mexico, according to the International Organisation for Migration.
San Martin Jilotepeque municipality in rural Guatemala is comprised of dozens of villages and hamlets with a total population of under 100,000 people, most of whom are Indigenous. Lack of employment opportunities leads to high rates of migration, predominantly to the US. Source: Supplied / NGO Nursing Heart
“People here don’t migrate (to the US) because they want to; they migrate because they have no choice. The poverty they live in forces people like us to leave our country and our families,” Yolanda said.
“It’s not easy to leave your home. My husband and so many like him work very hard to make an honest living (to support their families). It would be unjust for them to be deported.”
A desperate bid for survival
These factors are often at odds with the increasingly belligerent rhetoric Trump has deployed to promote and defend his mass deportation policies, the source said.

Migrants sit by the iron fence waiting to be processed by the US Border Patrol near the Jacumba Hot Springs after crossing the US-Mexico border in San Diego, California, on 13 June 2024. Credit: VCG/VCG via Getty Images
During his presidential campaign, referring to them as invaders, animals, and criminals who were terrorising “innocent Americans” and taking their jobs.
“They apply for a visa, look for refugee status or political asylum … and only attempt to illegally enter the target country if all of this fails,” they said.
The Guatemalan community’s fear surrounding Trump’s mass deportation policies is “huge”, they said.
The Beast: Mexico’s Deadliest Train
The devastating human toll of mass deportation
While it’s unclear how and if his plan will work, it threatens to tear even more mixed-status families apart.

Carlos Cordero was brought to the US illegally as a four-year-old child by his mother and spent most of his life there before being deported to Guatemala in 2019.
Carlos Cordero’s story highlights the devastating human toll of deportation from the US.
“Landing in Guatemala was a culture shock. Coming back to a place of which I had no memory of was like going to a foreign country, and most people here don’t accept me as Guatemalan because of the way I look and talk,” Cordero said.

Deportee Carlos Cordero had to leave behind his wife, five-year-old son, and teenage daughter. Millions of mixed-status families may be impacted by Trump’s harsh immigration policies.
“I personally feel like I don’t belong anywhere. I feel so angry being torn away from my family simply for being Guatemalan in the US, but my deportation was particularly devastating for my five-year-old son,” he said.
“Imagine, a five-year-old in anger management classes.”
‘Returnees often haven’t bathed for up to two weeks’
“Most are so disoriented they’re unfamiliar with the routes to return to their places of origin, have no money to get there, or lack family or friends in Guatemala (in order to resettle).”
“All they want is a better life and nothing else.”