Haiti - Mexico : Haitian informal economy on the southern border despite the Police and the National Guard - HaitiLibre.com : Haiti news 7/7
 Download the revised decree and electoral calendar, published in the official journal





Dominican Republic : Over US$563 Million Exported to Haiti in 5 Months

ENP : Laying of the foundation stone for the women's dormitory in Haiti

2026 World Cup : Enhanced security measures in the country for the Haiti vs Brazil match

FAd’H : First aid training concludes for FAd’H

MOFA Taiwan Scholarship 2026 : List of 46 scholarship recipients in Haiti


more news


Zapping Haiti of June 19, 2026

Creation of the Haiti's School and Vocational Guidance Unit

Haiti - FLASH Sunrise Airways : Win 2 round-trip plane tickets

The city of Cap-Haïtien is gradually regaining its splendor

Haiti - Leisure : Did you know ? #33


more news


Haiti - Mexico : Haitian informal economy on the southern border despite the Police and the National Guard
09/02/2023 10:48:48

Haiti - Mexico : Haitian informal economy on the southern border despite the Police and the National Guard

Haitian migrants are developing their own survival economy on Mexico's southern border, working in informal trade, aided by remittances they receive from relatives in the United States.

Hundreds of Haitians have been staying for the past few weeks in the central park of Tapachula, on the border with Guatemala, where they engage in informal trade in products while waiting for the National Institute for Migration (INM) grant them (after long months of waiting) of cards for humanitarian reasons. These informal activities, which they often carry out 8 to 12 hours a day, allow them to meet their needs to pay the rent, services and food for their family...

Groups of Haitian migrants settle behind the market of Sebastián Escobar (Tapachula) selling, among other things, food, clothing, shoes, sweets, vegetables, cell phone items and other plastic objects, or exchanging currencies, while many others cut hair or shine shoes...

Sergio Motaña is a fellow Haitian who has sold everything from cell phone chips, dollars, soft drinks and even food "for me it's a very nice place [Tapachula], there are a lot of good people who have helped us, but the migration is very difficult. To get the paper out so we can get out of here, to travel to another place, it's kinda hard to get the permit, so we're here waiting to survive...

However, this informal and illegal trade does not take place without difficulty, operations of the Mexican forces (National Guard and municipal police) sometimes intervene to prevent hundreds of Haitian migrants from establishing street businesses in Tapachula and to prevent clashes between migrants and local traders said José Arturo Rojas, secretary of public services of Tapachula who assures that the local authorities have started to relocate Haitian migrants to the "Tianguis Centro" market.

More than 200 Haitian migrants who made their sales in the central park Miguel Hidalgo and in the surrounding streets of the city center, now do so in an orderly manner in the market of "Tianguis Centro" open from 6:00 am to 9:00 pm and without cause traffic problems.

Arturo Cárdenas Rojas, the Secretary of Public Services in charge of the municipal market said "So far, the migrants have said that they feel good in this space where the authorities have relocated them, because it has the necessary services to sell their products."

S/ HaitiLibre



Twitter Facebook Rss
Send news to... Daily news...




Why HaitiLibre ? | Contact us | Français
Copyright © 2010 - 2026
Haitilibre.com