San Diego Union-Tribune

MEXICAN PRESIDENT MEETS WITH EL SALVADOR LEADER

López Obrador touts farming program to deter migration

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Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador met with his Salvadoran counterpar­t, Nayib Bukele, on Friday but did not mention rights complaints about El Salvador’s massive roundup of suspected street gang members.

The two leaders’ approach to high levels of homicides — a pressing problem in both countries — couldn’t be more different. López Obrador espouses a “hugs not bullets” nonconfron­tational policy, while Bukele brags about 24,000 arrests in just over a month and cutting food rations for inmates.

But the focus Friday, at least in public remarks, were the concerns about immigratio­n and the Mexican president’s desire for developmen­t aid so that people in Central America won’t feel forced to emigrate.

As in Guatemala — the first stop on López Obrador’s five-day tour to four Central American countries and Cuba — he touted his pet program, known as “Planting Life,” which pays farmers a monthly wage to plant and care for fruit and lumber trees.

The tree-planting program has been criticized in Mexico for being designed as a social program without the necessary environmen­tal science input. Scientists have noted that planting commercial species of trees could actually damage some ecosystems. And there are reports farmers have cleared natural forest — which they don’t make much money from — to plant trees and get paid for it.

When it was launched, López Obrador promoted it as a way to keep rural farmers on their land and relieve the pressure to migrate. He rarely mentioned an environmen­tal benefit until coming under more criticism for his promotion of polluting industries and attempting to get the U.S. government to fund an expansion of the program.

Mexico is also funding a program of workplace apprentice­ships for unemployed youths. Critics say both programs lack accountabi­lity and transparen­cy.

López Obrador has helped fund the expansion of the programs to El Salvador and Guatemala. But he has criticized American officials for being loath to fund his programs.

“It would be expected that the U.S. government and Congress would hand over the $4 billion that President (Joe) Biden offered to invest in these programs,” López Obrador said. In fact, U.S. officials have long indicated they would invest in their own developmen­t programs.

“We don’t have to be waiting and we cannot depend on anybody,” the Mexican leaders said. “We have to make use of our right to selfdeterm­ination as free and sovereign people.”

López Obrador is later scheduled to visit Honduras, Cuba and Belize.

It is only be the third overseas trip in more than three years for López Obrador, who is fond of saying that the best foreign policy is good domestic policy. The tour is an opportunit­y for Mexico to reassert itself as a leader in Latin America and will be welcomed by some leaders under pressure from the U.S. government and others for their alleged anti-democratic tendencies.

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