Border Patrol officials in southern Arizona said more than 90 unaccompanied Guatemalan children were found near Sasabe on July 8.
GUATEMALA CITY (AP) - Guatemala’s consulate in Tucson, Arizona, said July 14 it has identified 456 unaccompanied Guatemalan minors, most between the ages of 7 and 17, who had been found by U.S. Border Patrol officers so far in July.
U.S. officials often ask home-country consulates to identify minors.
The Guatemalan Foreign Relations Ministry said Wednesday that the children were found in several Arizona border communities, including Sasabe, Naco and Nogales.
Each of those communities has a Mexican town of the same name on the other side of the border. Monday and Tuesday were particularly busy, with 80 kids identified.
The minors had entered the United States without proper documents. They were mainly from the heavily indigenous and rural provinces of Huehuetenango, San Marcos and Quiche.
Ursula Roldan, who researches migration at the Rafael Landívar University, said "the number seems very high in such a short span of time."
"I think it has to do with family reunification," Roldan said. "I think the immigrant smugglers are hurrying things up because there has been talk of investigating the smugglers’ structures."
Unaccompanied minors who make it into the U.S. are sometimes placed with relatives there. But the Guatemalan government says that so far this year, 2,873 unaccompanied minors have been deported from Mexico and the United States.
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