Mexico uses X-ray in getting illegal immigrants entering country

Mexico is currently using a wide range of techniques and tools as it steps up its immigration enforcement after a deal brokered with the United States to avoid tariffs— including a giant X-ray.

While the Mexican National Guard deploys to places like Tapachula on the country’s southern border and makes changes to its asylum protocol, agents with the country’s National Migration Institute (INM) are using an X-ray to find migrants being smuggled into the country in trucks.

Mexican officials have reported that they have apprehended at least 200 migrants hidden in trucks the last two days, using X-rays to see the people hidden inside. The Mexican security ministry also said it found 228 migrants in a routine search of a soft drink transportation truck in one of its southern states on Monday.

The INM’s new leader, former prisons chief Francisco Garduno, has overseen several high-profile busts of commercial vehicles smuggling migrants, including 800 people in four trucks the weekend he assumed control.

The Mexican authorities usually capture migrants from Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador, many of which are below 16. They attempt to travel through Mexico to the United States southern border, where United States Customs and Border Protection reported nearly 133,000 arrests in May.

“We are in a full-blown emergency,” a CBP official said June 5.

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