Los Angeles Times

Mexico plans $30 billion in developmen­t aid

- By Patrick J. McDonnell and Tracy Wilkinson

MEXICO CITY — Mexico’s new government — under pressure from the Trump administra­tion to curb illegal immigratio­n to the U.S. — will pump more than $30 billion into developmen­t for southern Mexico, an investment plan meant in part to deter illicit migration from Central America, the country’s top diplomat said Monday.

Speaking at a global migration conference in Marrakech, Morocco, Foreign Secretary Marcelo Ebrard pledged that Mexico would embark on a five-year investment scheme for job-creating projects in impoverish­ed southern Mexico that would also help spur developmen­t in Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador. Those three so-called Northern Triangle nations account for most U.S.bound migrants, including members of the controvers­ial “caravans” that have converged on Tijuana.

The idea, Ebrard said, was to reduce poverty — a major root cause of migration — and thus cut an incentive for people to leave their homelands.

Mexico hopes to “compete in a successful way with the narrative that is being imposed in much of the world, including in the Americas, that the best way to confront migration is to exclude it and control it,” Ebrard, accompanie­d by Central American diplomats, said in Marrakech.

But Mexico’s new foreign secretary did not specify how money spent in the south of his nation would aid developmen­t in Central America. Authoritie­s said more specifics would be available in coming weeks.

The plan comes as the Trump administra­tion increases pressure on Mexico to take more forceful actions to halt Central American migration.

President Trump has threatened to close the U.S. border with Mexico and cut off aid to Central American countries if asylum seekers and others continue to press for entry into the United States.

Meanwhile, talks continued between Mexican government representa­tives and Trump administra­tion officials as Washington seeks to implement a new policy that would force Central American asylum seekers to remain in Mexico while their claims are processed.

Mexico has resisted this proposal, which the White House views as a means to reduce escalating numbers of Central Americans trying to enter U.S. territory. Some Mexican officials are wary of acceding to Trump’s wishes and placing a new burden on the country’s northern border towns.

Ebrard met this month in Washington with Secretary of State Michael R. Pompeo and Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen, but no new agreement on migration has been announced.

Asked how the negotiatio­ns were proceeding, a State Department spokespers­on said, “The United States enjoys excellent cooperatio­n with Mexico on a broad range of political, security, migration and economic issues. Secretary Pompeo speaks frequently with his Mexican counterpar­t.”

Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador unveiled a “comprehens­ive developmen­t plan” for the three Central American nations on Dec. 1, the day of his inaugurati­on. But his foreign secretary’s comments on Monday mark the first official commitment of Mexican funds to the project — though all of the money, at least for now, appears earmarked for Mexico.

“This [plan] at least deals with the fact that you can’t stop migrants from coming unless you create conditions to allow them to stay at home,” said Maureen Meyer at the Washington Office on Latin America, a human rights advocacy organizati­on.

The new developmen­t program does not appear to address the issue of crime in Central America, another major factor in pushing migrants northward. And it was unclear what if any anticorrup­tion safeguards would be envisioned if additional aid were sent to Central America, where graft has long been a major problem. Eric Olson, a consultant to the Mexico Institute at the Woodrow Wilson Center in Washington, called Mexico’s sweeping plans more “notional” than actual, noting that the country was already facing major financial challenges on a number of fronts.

Mexico’s new president has consistent­ly vowed to respect the “human rights” of migrants and argued that job-creating investment — not increased law enforcemen­t — was the best means to deter illicit migration. He has offered to provide working papers and temporary residency for Central Americans living in Mexico.

“We want migration to be optional, and not an obligation,” Lopez Obrador said repeatedly before taking office.

patrick.mcdonnell @latimes.com tracy.wilkinson @latimes.com Times staff writer Molly O’Toole in Washington and Cecilia Sanchez of The Times’ Mexico City bureau contribute­d to this report.

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