Stabroek News

U.S. targets Central America officials for possible sanctions over corruption -envoy

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WASHINGTON, (Reuters) - The Biden administra­tion plans to release by the end of June a list of corrupt Central American officials who may be subject to sanctions, a U.S. special envoy told Reuters, as Washington seeks to cut back on a root cause of increased migration to the U.S.-Mexican border.

Ricardo Zuniga, President Joe Biden’s point man for Central America’s Northern Triangle countries of Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador, also said the administra­tion was considerin­g further sanctions against officials in the region for alleged graft under the Global Magnitsky Act.

U.S. officials see corruption as one of the main drivers for the flow of migrants - along with poverty, gang violence and the fallout from hurricanes last year and want to make sure a $4 billion aid package being put together for the region does not fall prey to graft.

“That’s the mandate from Congress. We have a responsibi­lity and we’re going to meet it,” Zuniga said in an interview on Wednesday. “That tracks with our commitment to defend those who are combating impunity.”

Zuniga was referring to a law sponsored by then-U.S. Representa­tive Eliot Engel and enacted by Congress in December that requires the State Department to assemble within 180 days a socalled Engel List of corrupt actors in the Northern Triangle.

The administra­tion, he said, would comply with that congressio­nal requiremen­t. Those targeted could then be subject to bans on travel to the United States, seizing of U.S. property and prohibitio­ns on Americans doing business with them.

Central American officials may be more likely to have assets in the United States, given the geographic proximity and historical relationsh­ips, than those from countries that have fewer U.S. financial links.

Another path for sanctions in Central America could be the use of so-called Global Magnitsky measures, which the United States has imposed for years on those accused of corruption, human rights abuses and antidemocr­atic actions around the world.

Zuniga declined to name those who might face sanctions.

Asked whether Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernandez might be targeted, Zuniga said: “I’m not going to comment on him because of the Department of Justice engagement on his case.” Hernandez is under U.S. investigat­ion for alleged links to drug cartels. He denies any involvemen­t in drug smuggling.

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