As US tightens stance on migrants and refugees, is Mexico prepared to take more?
It took more than a year, thousands of miles of travel, and a medical exam by a pair of volunteer midwives in the back of a car for C., a Honduran migrant in Mexico, to learn the real value of her temporary humanitarian visa.
“I found out in this moment that I have rights,” says C., who asked to use only her first initial for security reasons, as she sits amid dozens of brightly colored tents crammed into the open-air section of the shelter where she and her boyfriend lived for about a month this year. The midwives suggested she seek out a doctor to confirm their suspicion that she’s having twins – a visit C. didn’t know she was entitled to make.
C.’s visa includes medical care, permission to work legally in Mexico, and
Refugee 'ping-pong'?A 'life preserver'Time to buildYou’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.
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