The Morning Call

US to Mexico: More needed to slow migrants

- By Natalie Kitroeff and Maria Abi-Habib

The Biden administra­tion has been quietly pressing Mexico to curb the stream of migrants coming to the United States, urging it to take in more families being expelled by U.S. authoritie­s and to step up enforcemen­t at its southern border with Guatemala, according to Mexican officials and others briefed on the discussion­s.

President Joe Biden has moved quickly to dismantle some of former President Donald Trump’s signature immigratio­n policies, halting constructi­on of a border wall, stopping the swift expulsion of children at the border and proposing a pathway to citizenshi­p for millions of immigrants in the United States.

But he is clinging to a key element of Trump’s agenda: relying on Mexico to restrain a wave of people making their way to the United States.

Anticipati­ng a surge of migrants and the most apprehensi­ons by U.S. agents at the border in two decades, Biden asked President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador of Mexico this month whether more could be done to help solve the problem, according to Mexican officials and another person briefed on the conversati­on.

A Biden administra­tion official declined to comment on discussion­s with Mexico but noted that both countries shared a common goal of reducing migration by addressing its root causes and said they were working closely to stem the flow of people streaming to the border.

Mexico has agreed to increase its presence on its southern border with Guatemala to deter migration from Central America, one of the government officials said, and local Mexican officials say their country has recently stepped up efforts to stop migrants on the northern border with the United States.

But there are also signs that Mexico’s commitment to policing migration — a central demand of Trump, who wielded the threat of tariffs against all Mexican goods unless migration was curbed — may have flagged in the waning months of the Trump administra­tion.

From October through December, the number of Central Americans apprehende­d by Mexico declined, while detentions by U.S. agents increased, according to Mexican government numbers and data compiled by The Washington Office on Latin America, a research organizati­on that advocates for human rights.

“The likelihood of the outgoing Trump administra­tion threatenin­g tariffs again was low, so there was an incentive for Mexico to go back to its default state of low

apprehensi­ons,” said Adam Isacson, an expert on border security at The Washington Office on Latin America.

The Biden administra­tion’s appeal to do more against migration has put Mexico in a difficult position. While Trump strongarme­d Mexico into militarizi­ng the border, some Mexican officials argue that his harsh policies may have at times helped lessen their load by deterring migrants from attempting to make the journey north.

Biden is less likely to resort to threats of tariffs to get his way, officials and analyst say. But now Mexico is being asked to hold the line against a surge of migrants —

while the Biden administra­tion is signaling that the United States is more welcoming to migrants.

“They get to look like the good guys, and the Mexicans look like the bad guys,” said Cris Ramón, an immigratio­n consultant based in Washington, D.C.

“All the positive humanitari­an policies are being done by the Biden administra­tion.” Ramón added, “and then the Mexicans are left with the dirty work.”

López Obrador is also trying to find a way of increasing capacity to house migrants in shelters, which are bursting at the seams. In a statement Tuesday, the secretary for homeland security, Alejandro Mayorkas, said he was “working with Mexico to increase its capacity to receive expelled families.”

Local officials in Chihuahua and shelter operators say that coordinati­on has broken down between Mexican and U.S. authoritie­s. During the last years of the Trump administra­tion, U.S. officials would notify their Mexican counterpar­ts before expelling migrants across the border and would orchestrat­e the crossings at a handful of well-staffed border checkpoint­s, they say.

Under the Biden administra­tion, they say, Customs and Border Patrol agents now deposit migrants at some of the most obscure, understaff­ed checkpoint­s, leaving their Mexican counterpar­ts scrambling when they discover dozens of migrants walking in from the United States.

Local government officials in Ciudad Juárez and shelter operators say that Mexico is dialing up operations to capture and deport migrants along the northern border. On a nearly daily basis, two of them said, Mexican authoritie­s are stopping vans stuffed with families and pickup trucks carrying livestock — along with migrants crouching on the floor to avoid detection.

Part of the reason Mexico is willing to continue cracking down is that, despite being a country that has long sent people north, there is a lot of resentment toward Central American migrants.

“The level of negative attitudes that we have toward migrant flows has gone up, so there won’t be a political cost” for López Obrador, said Tonatiuh Guillén, who ran Mexico’s National Migration Institute in the first half of 2019. “But with Trump, we negotiated nothing; we gave them a lot, and they didn’t give us anything back,” he added, arguing that the strategy should be different with Biden.

Despite the very public tensions with Mexico under Trump, López Obrador has been wary of the Biden administra­tion, concerned that it might be more willing to interfere on domestic issues like labor rights or the environmen­t.

Instead, several Mexican officials say, his government has pushed the United States to deter Central Americans from migrating by sending humanitari­an aid to Honduras and Guatemala in the wake of two hurricanes that devastated those countries and, many experts believe, pushed even more people to migrate.

Mexican officials have also asked the United States to send more Hondurans and Guatemalan­s apprehende­d in the United States directly to their home countries rather than releasing them to Mexico, making it even harder for them to try to cross the border again.

 ?? LM OTERO/AP ?? A security guard checks a vehicle Thursday at a convention center used to hold migrant teens in Texas.
LM OTERO/AP A security guard checks a vehicle Thursday at a convention center used to hold migrant teens in Texas.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States