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  Mexico town split over Central American drifters
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ContributorJason 
Last EditedJason  Nov 09, 2009 02:28am
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CategoryGeneral
AuthorTracy Wilkinson
MediaNewspaper - Los Angeles Times
News DateThursday, October 15, 2009 08:00:00 AM UTC0:0
DescriptionReporting from Tultitlan, Mexico - Gathered below an overpass on Independence Avenue, dressed in the multiple layers typical of homeless travelers, the migrants watched for the next northbound freight train through Tultitlan.

Many of them, mostly young men and boys, prepared to hop aboard, hobo-style, on an ever-more-precarious trip that might get them as far as the United States.

But fewer migrants are achieving that goal. Central Americans who for years have passed through Mexico en route to the U.S. are increasingly cutting their trips short as they run out of cash or become discouraged by fewer opportunities farther away from home.

The lingering presence of the migrants in this town, about an hour's drive outside Mexico City, is tearing the small community apart, with some residents providing migrants with food, clothes and aid and others complaining of their alleged crimes, plus a new local government maneuvering to get rid of them.
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