Raxruha
(Guatemala) (AFP) - Outside a humble thatched-roof home deep in the lush
Guatemalan countryside, the mother of a seven-year-old girl who died after
being detained by US border agents tries to remember happier days with her
daughter.
The
27-year-old woman mournfully points to a nearby tree that young Jakelin Caal
enjoyed climbing.
"I
feel pain and sadness over the death of my daughter," said Claudia Maquin,
speaking in her native Maya Q'eqchi' language through an interpreter.
Jakelin's
death in American custody on December 8 -- which followed her detention after
illegally crossing from Mexico with her father -- has reignited a debate in the
United States on immigration policy and mistreatment of migrants.
It has also
shocked residents of this indigenous farming village of unpaved roads that has
neither electricity nor running water, and where crushing poverty is the norm.
The child's
death came as President Donald Trump struggles to deter a tide of migrants
fleeing poverty and violence in Central America.
Nearly 60
percent of Guatemala's 17 million people live under the poverty line, according
to government and World Bank figures.
That rate
is higher in indigenous communities like the remote village where young Jakelin
lived in the municipality of Raxruha, some 145 kilometers (90 miles) north of
the capital Guatemala City.
![]() |
Claudia
Maquin stands outside the home where her late seven-year-old daughter
Jakelin
Caal grew up deep in rural Guatemala (AFP Photo/JOHAN ORDONEZ)
|
Left 'out
of necessity'
Jakelin's
father Nery Caal, 29, left the village to travel to the United States with her
on November 30.
"He
left out of necessity," Maquin told AFP, with her father-in-law Domingo
Caal acting as an interpreter.
"When
he left he said that he'd be looking for work there," she said.
Jakelin
traveled north with her father because "the girl was very close" to
him, said Domingo Caal, 61.
He said the
girl was "jumping with joy" as she began the trip.
Before
leaving "she told her mother and grandmother that when she grew up she would
work and bring money to them," he said.
The US
Department of Homeland Security confirmed the death of the girl, saying she
died of dehydration and exhaustion in an El Paso, Texas hospital less than 24
hours after being detained as part of a group of 163 illegal border crossers in
a remote New Mexico border area.
The DHS
confirmation came only after it was reported by The Washington Post.
![]() |
A relative
shows a picture of the late Jakelin Caal on a phone (AFP Photo/
JOHAN ORDONEZ)
|
Guatemala's
foreign ministry said the child came down with fever and was shaking and
vomiting after she was in US Border Patrol custody, where she received aid from
paramedics before being hospitalized.
Father
wants answers
The girl's
father, who is seeking asylum in the United States, issued a statement Saturday
in his family's name "seeking an objective and thorough
investigation" into his daughter's death.
The
statement was read to reporters by Ruben Garcia, the head of Annunciation
House, the refugee shelter where he is staying in El Paso, Texas.
Jakelin,
who was just five days past her seventh birthday, had not been crossing the
desert for days and "had not suffered from a lack of food or water prior
to approaching the border," the statement read.
The
statement also said that it was "unacceptable" that US agents had the
father, who mainly speaks Q'eqchi', sign documents in English.
Immigrant
rights activists, several waving signs and clutching pictures of the young girl,
rallied to protest Jakelin's death in downtown El Paso as Border Patrol agents
warily looked on from a distance.
![]() |
| A woman draws water from a well in the indigenous village of San Antonio Seacortez, home of the Guatemalan girl who died in the custody of US border agents (AFP Photo/ JOHAN ORDONEZ) |
"We
want to know what happened during those hours in which she was detained and
then taken to hospital," said one of the protesters, Fernando Garcia, head
of the Human Rights Border Network advocacy group.
The
Department of Homeland Security's inspector general announced an internal
investigation into the girl's death.
'What can
we do?'
The
Guatemalan government has offered to bring back the girl's remains, and said
that her father would be released by special permission from US immigration
authorities.
The late
girl's uncle Jose Caal told AFP that it could take some three weeks to complete
the process to repatriate the girl's body for a funeral.
"It's
very painful, very painful, but what can we do?" asked Domingo Caal.
"What
happened, happened, but it's painful," he said.




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