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There has been a Guatemalan presence in Mexico since at least 1895, when the National Census counted 14,004 individuals, [3] however this dropped to 5,820 in 1900. [3] Due to the devastating Guatemalan Civil War, many Guatemalans were allowed into Mexico as refugees. Some stayed only temporarily, but others settled down in the country.
In 2022, 1,400 Guatemalans requested asylum in Mexico. [10] In 2020, Guatemalan President Alejandro Giammattei paid a visit to Mexico. In May 2021, President Giammattei returned to Mexico on a State visit and along with President López Obrador, both leaders issued an apology to the Mayan communities of their respective nations. [11]
The commander of the Guatemalan Air Force (Spanish: Fuerza Aérea Guatemalteca, or FAG), Luis de Leon Urrutia, was ordered to develop a plan to locate and destroy foreign ships in Guatemalan territory. Less than 24 hours preceding the order, a team formed by Urrutia had come up with Operation Drake, which, on December 30, was both approved and ...
Two Guatemalan migrants were killed and three others — along with a Honduran man — were wounded in a shooting in northern Mexico near the U.S. border that apparently involved Mexican army ...
Article 3 of the treaty of September 27, 1882, defines the Guatemala-Mexico border as follows: [1] The line along the middle of the Suchiate River, from a point situated in the sea three leagues from its mouth, up river, along its deepest channel, as far as the point [Vertice de Muxbal] where the same river intersects the vertical plane that passes the highest part of the volcano of Tacana ...
LAREDO, Texas (AP) — Six Guatemalans are charged with human smuggling linked to a semi-trailer truck crash in Mexico in 2021 that killed more than 50 migrants and were arrested in Guatemala and Texas on Monday, U.S. and Guatemalan authorities announced Monday.
A business that also has offices in the US and Mexico, it is one of the 30 or so officially registered in Guatemala to offer H-2A visas. ... The foundation helps send around 200 Guatemalans a year ...
The question of annexation to Mexico or independence was not important to the majority of indigenous Central Americans as it did not affect them. The K'iche', the largest Guatemalan indigenous group, were in favor of annexation as Mexico allowed the K'iche' to control their own affairs during the annexation process. [36]