00:00Oh
00:34The problem that I got out of my country was because of the threats of the pandillas.
00:39That's why I got out. I'm not out of poverty, I'm out of the security of my life.
00:44That's what made me run for here.
00:47And I'm applying, asking for refuge here in Mexico.
00:51If it's possible to leave, I think I'll leave for a while.
01:20In the beginning, we crossed Guatemala and there was a very good trip to Mexico.
01:27In Mexico, yes. It was very different. I had to walk. I walked for more than two days, I think.
01:35I got to Arriaga, from Arriaga to Ixtepec, on the train. We went to the train. I didn't really want
01:42to go.
01:46Only people who have been up to the train could know that anxiety, that energy that they feel there,
01:52that it can be weird. Just hearing the train, how it raspa the tracks, when we are close,
02:01it's like to get nervous. Imagine going up, driving.
02:06The train was very long. We had many people.
02:09And suddenly, my husband told me, this is not good. Something will happen.
02:15I saw some cars. They approached the train.
02:18So, I went to the train and said, all right, they cry. All right, they cry.
02:23They cry. And they say, something is happening.
02:30The violence in the train in Mexico, basically,
02:35has to do with the presence of criminal organizations throughout the route
02:40that extorsionate migrants to get up to the train, or to ride a bus, or to continue the route.
02:50And this extorsion is normally accompanied by violence.
02:54And then we have a number of people who are injured in the train.
03:02And I'm like, long ago, I was going to walk a walk.
03:05I was still walking up walkway, with a walkway,
03:08and we're running from the train.
03:11And when I was walking on a walkway, I was running.
03:13And one of those, I hit the race we did, and I didn't step back to the lane train to
03:20die.
03:20But I fell in the other lane, but I fell at a side.
03:24I'm going to recover now, I hope to walk again, but with a part that is not going to be
03:31from my body.
03:39I worked with Tapachula, and they jumped, they hit me, I was like 15 days,
03:45it was very serious, the same as my head, I was hurt, the stones that they gave me, they hit
03:51me very strong.
03:53They let me break my head, all that, I saw many wounds that made me.
03:58Here, everything here, they also broke me.
04:12I have been hurt, I have been hurt, I have been hurt, I have been hurt.
04:30And this is one of the most important things that I have to offer to this population.
04:31So as the property, I've been able to prevent this population from this population,
04:33I'm really looking for to prevent this population from the population.
04:40They are developing my population, this is giving me away from a minority population,
04:46and this is also moving back to the population in the population,
04:49and this is to have to be a better place to provide the population,
04:55or the status of asylum.
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