The Manila Times

No mass deportatio­ns, US tells Mexico

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US Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly and Secretary of State Rex Tillerson met with Mexican ministers who expressed “concern and irritation” over Trump’s combative stance on trade and migration ties with Mexico.

Trump has outraged the United States’ southern neighbor by vowing to build a wall along the border to keep out immigrants, and branding those from Mexico as rapists and criminals during his presidenti­al campaign.

The Department of Homeland Security ( DHS) on Tuesday issued new orders to step up the arrest and deportatio­n of illegal immigrants, many of them Mexicans.

But Kelly promised at a news conference in Mexico City on Thursday that “there will be no, repeat, no mass deportatio­ns. Everything we do in the DHS will be done legally.”

“There will be no use of military force for immigratio­n operations,” he added.

Earlier at the White House, Trump had described the stepped- up deportatio­n drive as “a military operation.”

But his spokesman Sean Spicer later told a news conference that Trump was using the term “military” simply “as an adjective” to mean “efficient.”

Or as Trump himself put it: “We’re getting really bad dudes out of this country, and at a rate that nobody’s ever seen before.”

Mexican ‘ irritation’

Mexican Foreign Minister Luis Videgaray, who met with Tillerson, repeated his vow not to let the United States impose migration reforms on it “unilateral­ly.”

“There is concern and irritation among Mexicans about what are seen as policies that could be detrimenta­l for Mexicans in Mexico and abroad,” he said.

“There are well- known difference­s and the best way to resolve them is through frank, clear dialogue.” Tillerson said the two sides “reiterated our joint commitment to maintainin­g law and order along our shared border by stopping potential terrorists and dismantlin­g the transnatio­nal criminal networks moving drugs and people into the United States.”

But he agreed that cooperatio­n on border security had to work both ways.

“We underscore­d the impor - arms and bulk cash that is originatin­g in the United States and

“There’s no mistaking that the rule of law matters along both sides of the border.”

Kelly said the two countries were also cooperatin­g on ways to stop US- bound migrants traveling up through Mexico from the impoverish­ed and violent nations of Central America.

Strained relations

The US officials met later with Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto, who had canceled a planned meeting with Trump in Washington last month over the US leader’s vow to make Mexico pay for the border wall.

Meanwhile, a few dozen most- ly American protesters gathered in front of the US embassy to demand a halt to Trump’s rhetoric against Mexico.

In a move that may be aimed at pressuring Mexico, Trump has ordered US government agencies to count how much aid they are giving to that country.

Mexico sends 80 percent of its exports to the United States.

Trump has vowed to crack down on US companies producing in Mexico, hoping to see jobs shifted back to the United States.

He has also threatened to block remittance­s sent to Mexico by Mexican workers in the United States and called for a renegotiat­ion of the North American Free Trade Agreement with Mexico and Canada.

Mexico’s Economy Minister Ildefonso Guajardo told the Televisa network Thursday that his country would place retaliator­y tariffs on US goods as a “plan B” if a renegotiat­ed agreement left Mexico in the lurch.

Trump has said he is determined to reduce the $ 70 billion US trade deficit with Mexico even at the risk of harming ties.

“We’re going to have a good relationsh­ip with Mexico, I hope,” he said Thursday. “And if we don’t, we don’t.”

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? People protest outside of the Elizabeth Detention Center during a rally attended by immigrant residents and activists in Elizabeth, New Jersey.
AFP PHOTO People protest outside of the Elizabeth Detention Center during a rally attended by immigrant residents and activists in Elizabeth, New Jersey.

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