Some 3,000 people left Honduras on foot Friday in the latest migrant caravan hoping to find a welcome, and a better life, in the US under President-elect Joe Biden.

Seeking to escape poverty, unemployment, gang and drug violence and the aftermath of two devastating hurricanes, the migrants plan to walk thousands of kilometers through Central America.

But they will have to overcome a rash of travel restrictions in Guatemala and Mexico long before they even make it to the American border.

The quest is likely to end in heartbreak for many, with American authorities already having warned off the group that includes people of all ages and some entire families.

The Honduran migrants set off along side roads with backpacks, some with the Honduras flag, many with small children in their arms, and most with facemasks to protect against the coronavirus
The Honduran migrants set off along side roads with backpacks, some with the Honduras flag, many with small children in their arms, and most with facemasks to protect against the coronavirus AFP / Orlando SIERRA

"I want to work for my house and a car, to work and live a dignified life with my family," said Melvin Fernandez, a taxi driver from the Caribbean port city of La Ceiba in Honduras, who set off on the long journey with his wife and three children, aged 10, 15 and 22.

Most of the group set off shortly after 4:00 am (1000 GMT) from the transport terminal of San Pedro Sula, Honduras' second-largest city, headed for Agua Caliente on the Guatemalan border some 260 km (162 miles) away.

The migrants walked along side roads wearing backpacks, some holding the Honduras flag, many with small children in their arms, and most with facemasks to protect against the coronavirus.

The migrants say they hope to catch lifts from passing motorists or truckers or, failing that, walk the entire way.

The quest is likely to end in heartbreak for many, with American authorities already having warned the migrants not to 'waste your time and money'
The quest is likely to end in heartbreak for many, with American authorities already having warned the migrants not to 'waste your time and money' AFP / Orlando SIERRA

To enter Guatemala, the first country on their route, however, the migrants will have to show travel documents and a negative coronavirus test -- requirements that not all of them meet.

"We are leaving with a broken heart, because in my case, I leave my family, my husband and my three children behind," 36-year-old Jessenia Ramirez told AFP.

"We are going in search of a better future, a job so we can send a few cents back home. We are trusting in God to open our path, Biden is supposed to give work opportunities to those who are there (on American soil)."

Many in the group hope to catch a lift from passing motorists or truckers along the route, failing which they intend to walk all the way
Many in the group hope to catch a lift from passing motorists or truckers along the route, failing which they intend to walk all the way AFP / Orlando SIERRA

The travelers are hopeful that Biden, who takes over the US presidency on Wednesday, will be more flexible than his predecessor Donald Trump.

Biden has promised "a fair and humane immigration system" and pledged aid to tackle the root causes of poverty and violence that drive Central Americans to the United States.

But Mark Morgan, acting Commissioner of the US Customs and Border Protection, warned the group last week not to "waste your time and money."

The US commitment to the "rule of law and public health" is not affected by the change in administration, he said in a statement.

"Biden is a good person and isn't the same as the administration that's about to end. Donald Trump has been selfish," vents a man who joined a group of about 3,000 Honduran migrants trying to reach the United States on foot, hoping to find a welcome, and
"Biden is a good person and isn't the same as the administration that's about to end. Donald Trump has been selfish," vents a man who joined a group of about 3,000 Honduran migrants trying to reach the United States on foot, hoping to find a welcome, and a better life, in the United States under President-elect Joe Biden's new administration. AFPTV / Orlando SIERRA

More than a dozen caravans, some with thousands of migrants, have set off from Honduras since October 2018.

But all have run up against thousands of US border guards and soldiers under Trump, who has characterized immigrants from Mexico as "rapists" who were "bringing drugs" and other criminal activity to the United States.

Guatemala, Mexico and Honduras have an agreement with the United States to stop north-bound migratory flows from the south of the continent.

Honduras has mobilized 7,000 police officers to supervise the latest caravan on its journey to the Guatemalan border.

Guatemala declared seven departments in a state of "alert," giving security forces the authority to "forcibly dissolve" any type of public groupings.

On Friday, officials said they had already returned about 100 Hondurans who began the trip from San Pedro Sula on Thursday and entered Guatemala illegally, without Covid tests. Another 600-odd migrants who arrived at the border were prevented from entering, Guatemalan police reported.

Hundreds of police and soldiers manned three border crossings to stop the caravan. Many wore gas masks and carried shields and truncheons.

On the Honduran side, in the town of El Florido, there were signs of desperation.

"We will not move until they let us cross. We will stage a hunger strike," said Dania Hinestrosa, 23, waiting with her young daughter.

"We have no work or food. That is why I am traveling to the United States," she said.

Mexican authorities said late Thursday that 500 immigration officers were being deployed to the Guatemalan border in anticipation of the caravan's arrival.

But the migrants are keeping the end goal in sight.

Among them, 28-year-old Eduardo Lanza said he dreamed of living in a country where people of different sexual orientations can live with dignity, "respect... and a job opportunity."

Norma Pineda, 51, said last year's hurricanes left her "on the street."