Mexican Semi-Truck Found With 513 People

By Cornelius Nunev


Two semi-trucks were recently stopped by Mexican cops. The trucks were jammed full of five hundred and thirteen illegal immigrants, bound for The United States. The human cargo was discovered to be huddled together in extreme conditions by x-ray scanners in the state of Chiapas in southern Mexico.

Human smugglers near Guatemalan border when they were found

In Chiapas, which is near the Guatemalan edge, Mexican authorities found a human smuggling operation. While two semi-trucks were driving through law enforcement checkpoints near Tuxtla Gutierrez, Chiapas, X-ray scanning equipment discovered that there were hundreds of individuals packed into the cargo trailers, according to MSNBC. Inside the trucks there were 513 people who were holding on to cargo ropes that had been strung while being hungry and dehydrated.

Immigrants not all from the same place

The people packed in the back of the trucks were from a number of nations. The majority of the individuals in the trucks were from Guatemala, but there were also 47 El Salvadorans, 32 Ecuadorans, six from Nepal, one from Japan, one from China and 12 from India. There were 32 females and 4 kids and the rest were male. According to CNN, four smugglers were arrested as they tried to get away. The Mexican cops are responsible for what will take place with the human cargo though. Air holes were only accessible on the top of the trailers, according to the Chiapas lawyer. Smugglers wanted $7,000 per person smuggled. In Puebla, the trucks were to be re-routed. This would have gotten the individuals in the U.S., in theory. There was a truck in the same area stumbled across in January with only 219 migrants.

How an immigrant travels to the United States

To be able to the get the United States, many illegal immigrants will go to Mexico. BBC reports that Mexican authorities thought this was one of the biggest finds. Illegal immigrants often have to enlist the help of human smugglers, known as coyotes or coyotaje, who get them across the U.S. border for a fee. Migrants have little recourse in the event of injury and could be subject to abuse. According to the Christian Science Monitor, there were 72 migrants killed by the Zetas drug cartel in August last year while between April and Sept last year, 10,000 were kidnapped.




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