A sense of despair has engulfed the migrant camp of La Soledad, named after the colonial-era church that towers over the shantytown in downtown Mexico City. It was supposed to be a temporary stop, a place to regroup and wait for the right moment to continue on toward the United States.
The Trump administration's use of U.S. military aircraft to return deportees has raised alarms throughout Latin America.
Did Sheinbaum really say "eye for an eye, tooth for a tooth....we will arrest all U.S. citizens in Mexico and deport them in the same way [Trump] is doing."
In another shift in federal policy, President Donald Trump strengthened a long-standing policy barring the use of taxpayer funds for elective abortions.
In Mexico City, some migrants have built tent cities and slept on the streets. In a country long sympathetic to migrants, neighbors are protesting.
Mexico has received non-Mexican migrants from the United States in the past week, and Central American nations could also reach similar agreements with the U.S. to accept deportees from other countries,
Aboard Air Force One, while en route to view wildfire devastation in California, President Trump signed a series of executive actions aimed at preventing the use of federal taxpayer dollars
This was the first time in recent memory that military aircraft were used to fly migrants out of the country, one U.S. official said.
Mexico was raising sprawling tents on the U.S. border Wednesday as it braced for President Donald Trump to fulfill his pledge to reverse mass migration.
Then in 2023 they set out for the United States, a perilous trip that began ... Dec. 12, 2024 The two eventually made their way to Mexico City, paying about $200 for their shanty in La Soledad.
Trump, 78, issued a presidential memorandum reinstating the so-called Mexico City Policy, which prevents the federal government from funding groups that finance abortion procedures in foreign