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ArrowArtboardCreated with Sketch.ArtboardCreated with Sketch.Title ChevronTitle ChevronIcon Mail ContactPath LayerPositive Arrow International relations Their encounters with American authorities jumped 10-fold in 2023 People from China and elsewhere who are suspected of illegally crossing the U.S.-Mexico border are detained by U.S. authorities in southern California on Feb. 4. (Photo by Masahiro Okoshi)
MASAHIRO OKOSHI, Nikkei Washington bureau chiefFebruary 13, 2024 05:36 JSTUpdated on February 13, 2024 13:22 JST | U.S. JACUMBA, California -- The number of Chinese migrants detained while attempting to enter the U.S. via Mexico has multiplied, with the desperate economic situation back home a major driver, interviews at a holding encampment in southern California show. "We spent two and a half days walking through a rainforest -- two and a half days," said a 10-year-old boy who proudly recounted his family's life-or-death journey before crossing into the U.S. at dawn on Feb. 4.
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