China Daily (Hong Kong)

Migrant deal claim denied by new govt

Mexico’s incoming minister casts doubt on media report

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WASHINGTON/MEXICO CITY — US President Donald Trump said on Saturday that migrants seeking asylum in the United States via the southern border would wait in Mexico while their claims move through legal procedures, but the Mexican incoming government denied the two sides had reached any deal.

“Migrants at the Southern Border will not be allowed into the United States until their claims are individual­ly approved in court,” he tweeted on Saturday evening. “All will stay in Mexico.”

The president also renewed a threat to close the US-Mexico border “if for any reason it becomes necessary”.

The tweets came after The Washington Post reported Mexico’s incoming government has agreed to support the White House’s plan to remake US asylum policy.

However, Mexico’s incoming Interior Minister Olga Sanchez Cordero, who will take office next month, denied any type of agreements between the two sides in a statement on Saturday.

“There is no agreement of any type between the future federal government of Mexico and that of the United States of America,” the statement said, but did not explain why the Post had quoted her as saying that there had been agreement.

“For now, we have agreed to this policy of Remain in Mexico,” Sanchez was quoted by the US newspaper as saying in an interview, while calling it a “short-term solution”.

The newspaper said the plan, known as “Remain in Mexico”, would require those seeking refuge at the border to stay in Mexico while their cases are processed, potentiall­y terminatin­g the system, which Trump has decried as “Catch and Release” that has generally allowed asylum applicants to wait on US soil.

White House spokesman Hogan Gidley said, “President Trump has developed a strong relationsh­ip with the incoming (Lopez) Obrador Administra­tion, and we look forward to working with them on a wide range of issues.”

Stephanie Leutert, director of the Mexico Security Initiative at the University of Texas at Austin, described the Remain in Mexico plan as a strategy to take away the ability of migrants to live and work in the US while cases are processed. “The hope is that asylum-seekers will not want to live in (Mexico) for months/ years and won’t come,” Leutert said via Twitter.

Caravans of migrants, many of whom say they are fleeing from persecutio­n, poverty and violence in Honduras, Guatemala, and El Salvador, were making their way through Central America toward the US border for weeks. Many of them want to claim asylum.

Several thousand migrants, including women and children, are reportedly in the Mexican border city of Tijuana living in a makeshift shelter.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo made no mention of a deal with Mexico in a statement issued earlier this week but reiterated that “the caravans will not be permitted to enter the United States”.

Thousands of US troops have been deployed along the country’s southern border with Mexico to help strengthen border security while offering only engineerin­g, logistic and medical support.

However, Trump said earlier this week that he has given the troops the “OK” to use lethal force against migrants “if they have to”.

The president issued a proclamati­on earlier this month, saying that only people who enter the country at official checkpoint­s can apply for asylum, but it was temporaril­y blocked by a federal judge.

 ?? PEDRO PARDO / AFP ?? A crowd of Central American migrants stretch their hands to get food offered by volunteers outside a shelter in Tijuana, Mexico, near the US-Mexico border fence on Saturday.
PEDRO PARDO / AFP A crowd of Central American migrants stretch their hands to get food offered by volunteers outside a shelter in Tijuana, Mexico, near the US-Mexico border fence on Saturday.

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