The journey taken by Central American refugees seeking asylum in the U.S. has grown so violent that nine out of 10 migrants seen by Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontiers (MSF) psychologists exhibit symptoms of depression and trauma as a result—a 300 percent increase from 2014.
“The normalization of violence is a symptom in itself, which diminishes a person’s capacity to accurately interpret danger. This can be very dangerous if left untreated.”
—Dora Morales, Doctors Without BordersThose are the results of an MSF survey shared exclusively with the Guardian, the newspaper reported Friday.
“Two-thirds of migrants interviewed at shelters across the country reported suffering at least one violent attack—such as assault, rape or kidnapping—during their journey,” the survey found.
“The increase in violence against Central American migrants in Mexico is largely [due to] to the Southern Border Plan, an immigration clampdown launched in July 2014 after a surge of unaccompanied minors and families at the U.S. border,” the Guardian observed.
The newspaper adds:
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