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Mother separated from kids clings to branch as she struggles in Rio Grande, agents say

The border fence stays open at this spot so people can use the park and river in Eagle Pass, along the Rio Grande. A woman became stranded in the Rio Grande river while attempting to cross it with her three children, border agents said.
The border fence stays open at this spot so people can use the park and river in Eagle Pass, along the Rio Grande. A woman became stranded in the Rio Grande river while attempting to cross it with her three children, border agents said. rmallison@star-telegram.com

A Nicaraguan woman became separated from her three children and stranded in the Rio Grande while attempting to cross into the U.S., Customs and Border Protection said in a news release.

At around 11:15 a.m. on Feb. 16, a group of about 20 migrants attempted to enter the U.S. by wading across the Rio Grande, the release said. After doing so, three children in the group informed border agents from the Eagle Pass South Station that their mother was stuck in the river.

Agents found the woman in the water, unable to swim to shore. She was holding onto cane brush to keep from being swept away in the current, and told agents that her legs had gone numb in the water, the release said.

Agents were able to pull the woman to safety, the release said. She was reunited with her children and did not ask for medical assistance.

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This story was originally published February 18, 2022 at 10:34 AM with the headline "Mother separated from kids clings to branch as she struggles in Rio Grande, agents say."

VR
Vandana Ravikumar
mcclatchy-newsroom
Vandana Ravikumar is a McClatchy Real-Time reporter. She grew up in northern Nevada and studied journalism and political science at Arizona State University. Previously, she reported for USA Today, The Dallas Morning News, and Arizona PBS.
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