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  • Rubén Robles, nacido en Florencia, Zacatecas, México, fue Sargento E5 del US Army desplegado en Alemania durante la Guerra Fría. Con 4 hijos en California, fue deportado en 1998. Actualmente vive y trabaja en un taller de reciclaje de ropa en Tijuana, en la frontera noroeste de México.  (Foto: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_deported-veterans_01.JPG
  • Los militares regresaron del servicio a la vida civil, con síntomas de Trastorno de Estrés Post Traumático, padecimiento que conduce a comportamientos antisociales, autodestructivos y, en ocasiones, suicidas. Al quitarse el uniforme y una vez como civiles, cometieron algún delito, menor o mayor y tras cumplir su condena, fueron deportados de inmediato y de por vida. Sin importar rango, méritos o condecoraciones de honor.  (Foto: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_deported-veterans_06.JPG
  • Héctor Barajas, Especialista en el 82nd Airborne estadounidense, nacido en Fresnillo, Zacatecas, México, fue deportado en 2004, quedando separado de su esposa e hija. Desde Tijuana, donde reside, ha buscado contacto con soldados veteranos deportados de los Estados Unidos y mantiene un refugio para darles cobijo y empleo temporal.  (Foto: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_deported-veterans_05.JPG
  • Alex Murillo, Airman en el US Navy, nacido en Sonora, México, fue deportado en 2011, dejando 4 hijos en Phoenix. Actualmente entrena fútbol americano con jóvenes estudiantes en Rosarito, Baja California, donde reside.  (Foto: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_deported-veterans_02.JPG
  • En el muro fronterizo entre México y Estados Unidos en Tijuana, una ceremonia de honor recuerda al veterano Gonzalo Chaidez, nacido en Durango y con residencia en Chicago, quien murió el 10 de marzo de 2015 por tuberculosis en Tijuana, a los 64 años. Había sido deportado en 2011, a avanzada edad. Su madre recibió sus cenizas en San Ysidro, California. (Foto: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_deported-veterans_08.JPG
  • Uno de los primeros actos públicos de los veteranos fue dibujar la bandera estadounidense volteada en el Parque de la Amistad en Tijuana, en el muro construido para detener la migración.  (Foto: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_deported-veterans_07.JPG
  • Los nombres de los veteranos deportados de varias nacionalidades fueron escritos en los barrotes del muro fronterizo entre Tijuana, Baja California y San Diego, California.  (Foto: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_deported-veterans_10.JPG
  • Un retrato de John F. Kennedy cuelga en las paredes de la Casa de Apoyo a Veteranos Deportados, conocido también como "El Bunker" en Otay, Tijuana.  (Foto: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_deported-veterans_04.JPG
  • Alfredo Varón, nació en Barranquilla, Colombia, pero vivió casi toda su vida en Nueva York. Durante 6 años sirvió en el Ejército de los EEUU, donde obtuvo 6 medallas y 3 recomendaciones. Tras ser detenido por pagar un cheque sin fondos, fue deportado en 2003 a Bogotá. El 16 de julio de 2015 consiguió una visa humanitaria para ser operado, pero murió el 18 en Chulavista, California.  (Foto: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_deported-veterans_03.JPG
  • Central american migrants arrive to Los Pinos presidential headquarters in Mexico City to seek a meeting with Enrique Peña Nieto on April 23rd, 2014, a week after they failed to address a train in their way to the United States. The migrants, with human rights defenders,  demand free transit through Mexico and Migratory authorities to stop violence in their way. <br />
<br />
Central American migrants have to make deadly and clandestine travels hidden in the wagons and gonads of the train during weeks to arrive to the United States.   rough Mexico. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_Migrants_viacrucis_13.JPG
  • Central american migrants arrive to Los Pinos presidential headquarters in Mexico City to seek a meeting with Enrique Peña Nieto on April 23rd, 2014, a week after they failed to address a train in their way to the United States. The migrants, with human rights defenders,  demand free transit through Mexico and Migratory authorities to stop violence in their way. <br />
<br />
Central American migrants have to make deadly and clandestine travels hidden in the wagons and gonads of the train during weeks to arrive to the United States.   rough Mexico. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_Migrants_viacrucis_11.JPG
  • Central american migrants arrive to Los Pinos presidential headquarters in Mexico City to seek a meeting with Enrique Peña Nieto on April 23rd, 2014, a week after they failed to address a train in their way to the United States. The migrants, with human rights defenders,  demand free transit through Mexico and Migratory authorities to stop violence in their way. <br />
<br />
Central American migrants have to make deadly and clandestine travels hidden in the wagons and gonads of the train during weeks to arrive to the United States.   rough Mexico. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_Migrants_viacrucis_12.JPG
  • in Reynosa, Tamaulipas, the caravan of central american mothers arrives to the border with the United States, where they throw flowers into the Bravo River. Tamaulipas is one of the most dangerous places for mexican and central american migrants due to the presence of criminal groups. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20121018_caravan_04.JPG
  • in Reynosa, Tamaulipas, the caravan of central american mothers arrives to the border with the United States, where they throw flowers into the Bravo River. Tamaulipas is one of the most dangerous places for mexican and central american migrants due to the presence of criminal groups. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20121018_caravan_01.JPG
  • in Reynosa, Tamaulipas, the caravan of central american mothers arrives to the border with the United States, where they throw flowers into the Bravo River. Tamaulipas is one of the most dangerous places for mexican and central american migrants due to the presence of criminal groups. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20121018_caravan_08.JPG
  • in Reynosa, Tamaulipas, the caravan of central american mothers arrives to the border with the United States, where they throw flowers into the Bravo River. Tamaulipas is one of the most dangerous places for mexican and central american migrants due to the presence of criminal groups. .Pictured: Aidée Luque Lazo, mother of José Elias Guevara Luque, from Progreso, honduras. She lost contact with her son in 2001, when he was in Matamoros..(Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20121018_caravan_02.JPG
  • in Reynosa, Tamaulipas, the caravan of central american mothers arrives to the border with the United States, where they throw flowers into the Bravo River. Tamaulipas is one of the most dangerous places for mexican and central american migrants due to the presence of criminal groups. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20121018_caravan_07.JPG
  • in Reynosa, Tamaulipas, the caravan of central american mothers arrives to the border with the United States, where they throw flowers into the Bravo River. Tamaulipas is one of the most dangerous places for mexican and central american migrants due to the presence of criminal groups. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20121018_caravan_06.JPG
  • in Reynosa, Tamaulipas, the caravan of central american mothers arrives to the border with the United States, where they throw flowers into the Bravo River. Tamaulipas is one of the most dangerous places for mexican and central american migrants due to the presence of criminal groups. .Pictured: Lidia Diego Mateo, from Nuevo San Lorenzo Ixcan, Guatemala, who lost contact with her daughter Leonora Morales Diego in 2008, when she was in Benemérito, Chiapas..(Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20121018_caravan_03.JPG
  • in Reynosa, Tamaulipas, the caravan of central american mothers arrives to the border with the United States, where they throw flowers into the Bravo River. Tamaulipas is one of the most dangerous places for mexican and central american migrants due to the presence of criminal groups. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20121018_caravan_05.JPG
  • Costilla del Cerro community in La Montaña range of Guerrero. People live of the harvest of corn, beans, quelites and chile and often migrate to work in the north of Mexico or the United States.  (Prometeo Lucero)
    Discrimination and disease in La MontaƱa
  • TENOSIQUE, Tabasco.- Central American stay near the railroad station in Tenosique, Tabasco, where they wait the arrival of "La Bestia".  In Tenosique some of them contract "walkers", "coyotes" or "polleros" who guide them into the United States border, a path controlled by the criminal group Los Zetas, dedicated to drug trafficking extortion and kidnapping. They should also pay an obligatory fee of around 100 and 300 USD to local criminal groups under threat of being thrown down. (Photo:  Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_Viacrucis_Archive_201308.jpg
  • A woman and her sons prepare to have a meal in the Integral Services Unit (USI)  in Tlapa, Guerrero on September 29th, 2010. The USI is a shelter for temporary migrant laborers where they eat and rest before departing into the northern states of Sinaloa, Michoacán and Baja California to work in tomato, lettuce and watermelon (beyond others) agricultural fields.  (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_PS_Sterile-Land_19.JPG