The Borneo Post

‘No mass roundups’ of migrants in US, says chief

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GUATEMALA CITY: The US is not carrying out mass roundups or deportatio­ns under its tough crackdown on undocument­ed migrants, but it is determined to “gain control” of its southern border, its domestic security chief said Wednesday.

“We are not going out and doing mass deportatio­ns,” Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly told a news conference in Guatemala, after talks with that country’s president.

He said that two memos he signed Tuesday, enacting directions from US President Donald Trump to clamp down on immigrants deemed to be in the US illegally would prioritise “criminal offenders” while ensuring due process in US courts was upheld.

“But there will be no mass roundups. When we do take someone into custody they are then put into the American legal justice system — that’s the courts, and it’s the courts that will decide what happens to them,” he said.

Kelly’s visit to Guatemala — one of three violence- and povertywra­cked Central American countries that provide many undocument­ed migrants to the US — was the fi rst by a senior US

We are not going out and doing mass deportatio­ns.

official since Trump took power last month.

Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras are especially concerned about Trump’s drive to cut down on illegal immigratio­n and to reduce the size of the undocument­ed migrant population in the US, estimated at 11 million.

Many of those living in America provide a vital fi nancial lifeline to family in Latin American countries in the form of remittance­s.

Guatemala’s interior minister, Francisco Rivas, said Kelly discussed migration and the scourge of violent gangs with his president, Jimmy Morales.

Rivas also said preparatio­ns were under way for a migration conference at which Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras would be represente­d. It could take place in Mexico or the US, he said.

Kelly said that Trump’s executive order meant a boost in the number of US border patrol officers and the constructi­on of a ‘ physical barrier’ — the wall Trump has repeatedly vowed to have built along the entire border with Mexico.

The Department of Homeland Security was therefore now working on “the expansion of expedited removal operations, prioritisi­ng criminal prosecutio­ns for immigratio­n offences committed at the border, and empowering state and local enforcemen­t agencies to assist in enforcing immigratio­n laws,” Kelly said.

He offered ‘sincere advice’ to any Guatemalan­s thinking of paying people smugglers to try to get them illegally into the US ‘to not do it’.

The journey was very dangerous, “and the very, very considerab­le money you will have to pay the ‘coyotes’ ( people smugglers) will be lost because we are picking up, that is to say reinforcin­g, our turnback efforts on the border.”

He added that, “by law, we are required to return irregular migrants to their home country.”

Kelly did not address US plans to have deported Central Americans sent to Mexico — something Mexico has signalled it may not accept. — AFP

John Kelly, Homeland Security Secretary

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