Millennium Post

Mexico says won’t fund wall but wants good ties with Trump

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MEXICO CITY: President Enrique Pena Nieto again rejected Donald Trump’s demand that Mexico pay for a wall along the border, but he vowed to seek good relations with the US president-elect.

Hours after Trump repeated his warnings against Mexico during a press conference, Pena Nieto said his government will seek “open and complete negotiatio­ns” with the next US government.

“Everything that defines our bilateral relations is on the table, including security, migration and trade,” he told an annual meeting of Mexican ambassador­s at the National Palace.

“At no time will we accept anything that goes against our dignity as a country and our dignity as Mexicans,” he said.

“It is obvious that we have some difference­s with the next government of the United States, like the issue of the wall that Mexico of course will not pay for,” Pena Nieto said as diplomats applauded.

“What I can assure you is that we will work to have a good relationsh­ip with the United States and its president.”

Trump said he could impose a “tax” on Mexico to fund the wall, which would first be paid for with funding arranged through the US Congress. While the Republican billionair­e did not mention his previous threat to tap into the remittance­s Mexican migrants send back home, Pena Nieto said he would work to “maintain the free flow of remittance­s.”

Turning to the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), which Trump wants to renegotiat­e, Pena Nieto said his country will seek an agreement that gives “certainty” to investment­s. In a thinly veiled reference to Trump’s vow to impose a 35 per cent tariff on companies that ship jobs to Mexico, the Mexican leader said his government rejects any attempt to influence foreign investors “on the basis of fear or threats.”

Pena Nieto issued his own demands to the incoming administra­tion, which takes office on January 20. He renewed Mexican demands that the US government stop the illegal traffickin­g of guns from the United States to Mexico, which the southern neighbour has blamed for fueling drug violence for years.

 ?? FILE PHOTO ?? The Us–mexico border fence near El Paso, Texas
FILE PHOTO The Us–mexico border fence near El Paso, Texas

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