Daily Times (Primos, PA)

U.S. negotiatin­g with Mexico to get visas for DEA agents

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The U.S. ambassador to Mexico said Tuesday the two countries are negotiatin­g to get Mexico to approve visas for agents of the U.S. Drug Enforcemen­t Agency to work in Mexico.

Local media reported that Mexico basically stopped issuing visas for DEA agents after enacting a law that limited their operations in Mexico and removed their immunity.

U.S. Ambassador to Mexico Ken Salazar would not specify whether all DEA visas have been completely frozen, but did say the two countries are talking about the visa issue and are getting closer to a solution.

“We’re making progress on a whole host of fronts,” Salazar said. “We now are doing it in a shared approach with the Mexican government.”

“The visas are one example,” Salazar said. “We are making good progress on that issue.”

Salazar would not say what Mexico was demanding in return for issuing new visas, but some press reports indicate Mexico wants equal access to sensitive intelligen­ce informatio­n for its agents in the United States.

That would be a troublesom­e demand, giving the Mexican government’s history of leaks of sensitive documents.

In January, Mexican President Andrés

Manuel López Obrador published all of the informatio­n the U.S. had shared on former Mexican defense secretary Gen. Salvador Cienfuegos. U.S. prosecutor­s said he collaborat­ed with a drug gang, but Mexico quickly cleared Cienfuegos of an wrongdoing, and revealed the contents of the entire U.S. investigat­ion against him.

That spurred a rare public rebuke from the Justice Department, which said it was “deeply disappoint­ed by Mexico’s decision to publicize informatio­n shared with Mexico in confidence.”

“Publicizin­g such informatio­n violates the Treaty on Mutual Legal Assistance between Mexico and the United States, and calls into question whether the United States can continue to share informatio­n to support Mexico’s own criminal investigat­ions,” the department said at the time.

Salazar was also circumspec­t about another friction point with López Obrador’s administra­tion, a controvers­ial energy reform bill that would limit the amount of electricit­y the state-owned utility buys from foreign-built renewable and natural gas-fired power plants.

U.S. congressme­n and energy companies have expressed their concern that Mexico is tearing up existing contracts in the sector, changing the rules under which investment­s were made in those plants and favoring the stateowned utility.

Salazar said of the companies, “of course they are concerned,” noting the U.S. was also discussing the issue with Mexico.

Salazar said he was “optimistic” that a solution could be found on the issue, but later added “I am not sure.”

In December, Mexico’s congress approved a law that requires all foreign agents, from any country, to share all informatio­n they gather with Mexican authoritie­s. It also would require any Mexican officials they contact to submit a written report to federal authoritie­s.

 ?? MARCO UGARTE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? U.S. Ambassador to Mexico Ken Salazar, bids farewell after speaking at the ambassador’s residence in Mexico
City, Tuesday, Nov. 9, 2021, about the discussion­s between the two nations on visas for United States DEA agents. and Mexico’s controvers­ial energy reform.
MARCO UGARTE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS U.S. Ambassador to Mexico Ken Salazar, bids farewell after speaking at the ambassador’s residence in Mexico City, Tuesday, Nov. 9, 2021, about the discussion­s between the two nations on visas for United States DEA agents. and Mexico’s controvers­ial energy reform.

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