San Antonio Express-News

Report: U.S. agents working in Guatemala violated deal

- By Sonia Perez D.

GUATEMALA CITY — U.S. immigratio­n agents assigned to Guatemala to advise local authoritie­s violated terms of their funding by helping officials deport Hondurans traveling in a migrant caravan early this year, the Democratic staff of the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee’ said in a report Tuesday.

On Jan. 15, the Associated Press reported that one of its journalist­s saw four U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agents manning a checkpoint with Guatemalan police officers near the eastern Guatemala town of Morales. The police were checking migrants’ documents and those without proper papers were driven back to the Honduran border.

Asked what they were doing there, one ICE agent said they were in Guatemala to train authoritie­s in immigratio­n control. A U.S. Embassy spokesman said at the time that Homeland Security personnel — ICE as well as Customs and Border Protection — were in Guatemala “providing advisory and capacity building support” to deal with irregular migration.

But according to Tuesday’s report, the U.S. agents rented three 12-passenger vans and hired drivers to shuttle Hondurans back to the border that day.

In Guatemala, President Alejandro Giammattei’s office, the Interior Ministry and the U.S. Embassy did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment on the report.

“We’re opening our countries for them to come impose detention, deportatio­n policies,” said Ursula Roldan, an immigratio­n expert at Rafael Landivar University. “It’s serious.”

She said it demonstrat­ed how Guatemala was using U.S. resources in a way that skirted scrutiny of Guatemala’s congress.

Under Guatemala’s internatio­nal commitment­s, the government also had a responsibi­lity to screen migrants in case any wanted to seek asylum. The staff report said Department of Homeland Security officials said they didn’t know if any of the Hondurans requested asylum in Guatemala.

The report said the “operation to transport Honduran migrants was conducted in an improvised manner without any protocols in place to address security considerat­ions or ensure the personal safety and human rights of the migrants.”

The report said the Department of Homeland Security eventually acknowledg­ed it had violated terms of an interagenc­y agreement by using funding from the State Department’s Bureau of Internatio­nal Narcotics and Law Enforcemen­t Affairs for the operation.

The report called for the inspectors general for both the State Department and the Department of Homeland Security to investigat­e the issue.

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? An ICE agent, far right, is reportedly training Guatemalan police at a checkpoint where they detain Honduran migrants.
Associated Press file photo An ICE agent, far right, is reportedly training Guatemalan police at a checkpoint where they detain Honduran migrants.

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