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Guatemala village mourns 2nd child to die in US custody| The Herald Guatemala village mourns 2nd child to die in US custody| The Herald

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Flickering candles and white flowers adorn a makeshift altar in a simple wooden home in Guatemala, remembering 8-year-old Felipe Gomez Alonzo, who on Christmas Eve became the second Guatemalan child to die while in U. S. border custody.
White flowers and flickering candles sat atop a low table inside the simple wooden home in remote, rural Guatemala. Nearby was a small pair of rubber boots, sized to fit an 8-year-old.
Taped to the wall were three photos, alternately smiling and serious, bearing a simple epitaph for the boy whose memory the makeshift altar honored: „Felipe Gomez Alonzo. Died Dec. 24 2018 in New Mexico, United States.“
On Christmas Eve, Felipe became the second Guatemalan child this month to die while in U. S. custody near the Mexican border. The deaths prompted widespread criticism of President Donald Trump, who has sought to deflect responsibility toward Democrats even as his Homeland Security secretary vowed additional health screenings for detained migrant children.
In the boy’s village of Yalambojoch, in western Guatemala, the political fallout in the United States seemed a world away and there was only deep sadness over his death. Relatives said they had no idea that such a tragedy could occur. Nor had they heard about U. S. policies that led to thousands of migrant children being separated from their parents earlier this year.
„We don’t have a television. We don’t have a radio,“ Catarina Gomez, Felipe’s sister, said Saturday. „We didn’t know what had happened before.“
The hamlet, set on a plain and surrounded by spectacular, pine-covered mountains, is a place of crushing poverty and lack of opportunity, home to a single small school, dirt roads that become impassible during the rainy season and rudimentary homes without insulation, proper flooring, water or electricity.
The community is populated by families who fled to Mexico during the bloodiest years of Guatemala’s 1960-1996 civil war but returned after the signing of peace accords. There are no jobs, and people live off meager subsistence farming and local commerce. Residents say the Guatemalan government has turned a blind eye to their plight, a complaint that can be heard in other impoverished villages in the country.
Felipe’s sister, Catarina, said that in recent years „everyone started heading for the United States,“ so much so that a local project to boost education financed with Swedish help was abandoned because there were practically no more young people to take the classes.

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