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కరీబియన్లపై భారత్ యువజట్టు ప్రదర్శన అదుర్స్ - శ్రేయస్ అయ్యర్
వెస్టిండీస్-ఏతో జరిగిన వన్డే సిరీస్ను 4-1 తేడాతో గెలుచుకుంది టీమిండియా-ఏ. ఐదు వన్డేల్లోనూ భారత్ యువ బ్యాట్స్మెన్, బౌలర్లు అద్భుతంగా రాణించారు.
కరీబియన్లపై భారత్ యువజట్టు ప్రదర్శన అదుర్స్
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Published : Jul 22, 2019, 1:45 PM IST
వెస్టిండీస్ పర్యటనలో భారత్-ఏ జట్టు అద్భుత ప్రదర్శన చేసింది. ఐదు వన్డేల సిరీస్ను 4-1 తేడాతో కైవసం చేసుకుంది. జట్టులోని అందరూ సమష్టిగా రాణించి విజయాన్ని దక్కించుకున్నారు.
అంటిగ్వా వేదికగా ఆదివారం జరిగిన ఐదో వన్డేలో వెస్టిండీస్-ఏ పై 8 వికెట్ల తేడాతో గెలిచింది టీమిండియా-ఏ. ప్రత్యర్థి నిర్దేశించిన 237 పరుగుల లక్ష్యాన్ని కేవలం 33 ఓవర్లలో రెండు వికెట్లు కోల్పోయి లక్ష్యాన్ని ఛేదించింది.
బ్యాటింగ్లో రుత్రాజ్(99) కొద్దిలో సెంచరీ మిస్ చేసుకున్నాడు. అనంతరం శుభ్మన్ గిల్(69)తో శ్రేయస్ అయ్యర్(61) లాంఛనాన్ని పూర్తి చేశాడు.
యువ క్రికెటర్ శుభ్మన్ గిల్ బౌలింగ్లో అన్నదమ్ములు రాహుల్ చాహర్(2/53)-దీపక్ చాహర్(2/39)తో పాటు నవ్దీప్ సైనీ(2/31) ప్రత్యర్థిని కట్టడి చేశారు.
ఇది చదవండి: వెస్టిండీస్ పర్యటనకు భారత జట్టు ప్రకటన
వెస్టిండీస్ పర్యటనలో భారత్-ఏ జట్టు అద్భుత ప్రదర్శన చేసింది. ఐదు వన్డేల సిరీస్ను 4-1 తేడాతో కైవసం చేసుకుంది. జట్టులోని అందరూ సమష్టిగా రాణించి విజయాన్ని దక్కించుకున్నారు.
అంటిగ్వా వేదికగా ఆదివారం జరిగిన ఐదో వన్డేలో వెస్టిండీస్-ఏ పై 8 వికెట్ల తేడాతో గెలిచింది టీమిండియా-ఏ. ప్రత్యర్థి నిర్దేశించిన 237 పరుగుల లక్ష్యాన్ని కేవలం 33 ఓవర్లలో రెండు వికెట్లు కోల్పోయి లక్ష్యాన్ని ఛేదించింది.
బ్యాటింగ్లో రుత్రాజ్(99) కొద్దిలో సెంచరీ మిస్ చేసుకున్నాడు. అనంతరం శుభ్మన్ గిల్(69)తో శ్రేయస్ అయ్యర్(61) లాంఛనాన్ని పూర్తి చేశాడు.
యువ క్రికెటర్ శుభ్మన్ గిల్ బౌలింగ్లో అన్నదమ్ములు రాహుల్ చాహర్(2/53)-దీపక్ చాహర్(2/39)తో పాటు నవ్దీప్ సైనీ(2/31) ప్రత్యర్థిని కట్టడి చేశారు.
ఇది చదవండి: వెస్టిండీస్ పర్యటనకు భారత జట్టు ప్రకటన
RESTRICTION SUMMARY: AP CLIENTS ONLY
SHOTLIST:
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Tijuana - 12 July 2019
1. Exterior Agape Mission shelter
2. Various Milagro de Jesús Henríquez Ayala rocking her baby son Alexander
3. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Milagro de Jesús Henríquez Ayala, Salvadorian migrant:
"My baby is Mexican, I'm still regularising my status, and even though I don't believe deportation is likely for me, it continues to be a source of fear for me. Despite everything, I plan to stay here in Mexico. I have not changed my mind."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Tijuana - 4 July 2019
4. Exterior Tijuana town hall
5. Various Henríquez Ayala registering her son's birth with baby in her arms
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
ARCHIVE: Tijuana - 11 May 2019
6. Various of migrants recently sent back across the border inside Agape Mission shelter
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Tijuana - 12 July 2019
7. Child greeting Rev. Alberto Rivera
8. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Rev. Alberto Rivera, Director of Agape Mission shelter:
"She is accompanied by her sister, younger than her, she feels a great responsibility for her sister. Since she is underage it's hard for her to obtain money, and there is no lack of people who want to take advantage of them because they are minors."
9. Henríquez Ayala walking through the shelter
10. Various migrant children playing inside shelter
11. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Milagro de Jesús Henríquez Ayala, Salvadorian migrant:
"It's not a matter of paying a coyote (smuggler) and leaving. You are placing your life in the hands of someone you don't know. Not even for a little while, not for anything. It's not about saying I crossed, this was it. There is risk on everything, even crossing when you have a number (for a first interview) has its risks, because you do not know if you'll be deported or be accepted."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Tijuana - 10 May 2019
12. Various of Henríquez Ayala getting ultrasound while pregnant
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Tijuana - 12 June 2019
13. Various Henríquez Ayala bathing her son Alexander for the first time
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Tijuana - 12 July 2019
14. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Rev. Alberto Rivera, Director of Agape Mission shelter:
"I did not know how deep the problem was for minors, but when Milagro came here we realized how many obstacles they have, how many things minors are facing, how many of their rights are being violated, and how minors are unprotected by the law."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Tijuana - 12 June 2019
15. Henríquez Ayala and her sister Xiomara holding baby Alexander after bath
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Tijuana - 10 May 2019
16. Migrants walking around shelter's hallway
17. Migrants' clothing hanging on clothes line
18. Migrant looking at Tijuana skyline
19. Various Tijuana skyline
STORYLINE:
The tiny, one-month-old boy cries softly in her young mother's arms as the sun sets outside the Tijuana Agape Mission shelter, on the Mexican side of the United States border.
Inside the shelter about 25 people sleep in the cinderblock room crammed with seven bunkbeds at a shelter overflowing with migrants, primarily from Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador but also from as far away as Africa.
For 16-year-old Milagro de Jesús Henríquez Ayala, her cramped corner bunk is not the ideal spot for raising her newborn son, but it is the best place she has found since she left her violent homeland of El Salvador with her younger sister, Xiomara, after gangs threatened their family.
She has finished the paperwork for a Mexican visa and is determined to build a life in Mexico, though she has no idea how she'll do that.
Henríquez Ayala said she is no longer seeking the American Dream, at least not for now.
"My baby is Mexican. I'm still regularising my status, and even though I don't believe deportation is likely for me, it continues to be a source of fear," she says. "Despite everything, I plan to stay here in Mexico. I have not changed my mind."
She left middle school and has almost no job skills, and now she must find work that allows her to be with her baby, Alexander.
The sisters, aged 15 and 13 at the time, were part of an untold number of Central American minors who travelled without their parents, accompanied only by other migrants, in a caravan that crossed Mexico and landed in this crime-ridden city in November.
Henríquez Ayala became pregnant by her then-boyfriend during the trip before arriving in Tijuana.
Even after that journey was over, life in the border city across from San Diego has been difficult and sometimes fearful.
"There is no lack of people who want to take advantage of them because they are minors," said Rev. Alberto Rivera, who runs the Agape Mission shelter and helped Henríquez Ayala throughout her pregnancy.
"I did not know how deep the problem was for minors," said a concerned Rev. Alberto Rivera. "How unprotected by the law they are."
At four months pregnant, Henríquez Ayala was living off cookies and juice.
She started suffering abdominal pains and felt anxious, fearing Mexican officials would deport them.
One day she discovered a bullet-riddled body outside the low-budget hotel where she and her sister cleaned rooms in exchange for lodging and a little food.
She almost miscarried. After she was taken to the emergency room, the girls moved to the shelter.
At seven months pregnant, a Mexican smuggler infiltrated the shelter pretending to be another migrant.
He tried to pressure Henríquez Ayala and her sister to cross the border illegally.
She refused because she was worried it would put her at risk again of miscarrying.
"It's not a matter of paying a coyote (smuggler) and leaving. You are placing your life in the hands of someone you don't know," she says.
The smuggler took another teen girl from the shelter instead.
Henríquez Ayala has not heard from that girl since, and fears she may have been kidnapped.
The girls' father, Manuel Henríquez, had left them after they crossed from Guatemala into Mexico to go on his own to the United States, because he thought it was too dangerous with his teenage children in tow.
But he was quickly detained and deported. Now he is with his daughters in Tijuana after Mexico granted him a one-year humanitarian visa, and he lives at the shelter too.
They all hope he can bring his remaining three adult children and three grandchildren, still in El Salvador, to Mexico.
Henríquez Ayala bathes Alexander in a small plastic tub on the cement floor next to her bunkbed.
Like all her baby's belongings, it was donated by someone across the border in the US.
Alexander wriggles and cries as she gently washes his black hair.
Each bunkbed is like a makeshift home where families pass their days waiting.
Waiting for their number to be called at the US-Mexico border so they can apply for asylum in the United States, or waiting on a Mexican visa to be able to work.
More people arrive each day.
Tijuana, which has the highest murder rate in Mexico, is not the dream Henríquez Ayala initially sought when she fled home. But she says it is better than the life she left behind.
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