Yuma Sun

Mexico, Honduras, Guatemala deploy troops to lower migration

- BY ALEXANDRA JAFFE

WASHINGTON – The Biden administra­tion has struck an agreement with Mexico, Honduras and Guatemala to temporaril­y surge security forces to their borders in an effort to reduce the tide of migration to the U.S. border.

The agreement comes as the U.S. saw a record number of unaccompan­ied children attempting to cross the border in March, and the largest number of Border Patrol encounters overall with migrants on the southern border – just under 170,000 – since March 2001.

According to White House press secretary Jen Psaki, Mexico will maintain a deployment of about 10,000 troops, while Guatemala has surged 1,500 police and military personnel to its southern border and Honduras deployed 7,000 police and military to its border “to disperse a large contingent of migrants” there. Guatemala will also set up 12 checkpoint­s along the migratory route through the country.

A White House official said Guatemala and Honduras were deploying troops temporaril­y in response to a large caravan of migrants that was being organized at the end of March.

Psaki said “the objective is to make it more difficult to make the journey, and make crossing the borders more difficult.”

She added that the agreement was the product of “a series of bilateral discussion­s” between U.S. officials and the government­s of the Central American nations. While Vice President Kamala Harris has been tasked with leading diplomatic efforts to tamp down on the increase in migration at the U.S. border, Psaki declined to share details on her involvemen­t with the discussion­s and said only that the discussion­s happened at “several levels.”

She noted that Roberta Jacobson, who will depart her role as the administra­tion’s southwest border coordinato­r at the end of the month, was involved in talks.

Mexico announced in March that it was deploying National Guard members and immigratio­n agents to its southern border, and it has maintained more personnel at its southern border since Trump threatened tariffs on Mexican imports in 2019.

On Monday, Mexico’s Foreign Affairs ministry said, “Mexico will maintain the existing deployment of federal forces in the its border area, with the objective of enforcing its own immigratio­n legislatio­n, to attend to migrants, mainly unaccompan­ied minors, and to combat the traffickin­g of people.”

Honduras Foreign Affairs Minister Lisandro Rosales said Monday that Honduras maintains a multinatio­nal force at its border with Guatemala that works closely with that government on not only immigratio­n, but also organized crime and other illegal activity. But “there was no commitment on the part of the Honduran delegation to put soldiers on the border, even though there is a clear commitment by the Honduran government to avoid this kind of migration that generates death and mourning for Honduran families,” Rosales said.

But Honduras Defense Secretary Fredy Santiago Díaz Zelaya, who was part of a Honduran delegation that met with U.S. officials in Washington last week, said later that the military was studying the possibilit­y of sending more troops to the border to assist in migration control. He said the military always works under a plan and that planning would determine how many troops would assist national police and immigratio­n authoritie­s at the border.

“We need to do a correct analysis of the situation, increase troops if it’s necessary,” Díaz Zelaya told local press. He said Honduras would do so “in response to this request that comes from the great nation to the north (the United States) to be able to help on the issue of immigratio­n.”

The Guatemalan government denied there was any signed agreement with the United States to place troops at the border to stop migrants. “The Guatemalan government has undertaken protection and security actions at the border since last year, on its own initiative, it is a constituti­onal mandate,” said presidenti­al spokeswoma­n Patricia Letona. “In the context of the pandemic, the protection of the borders has become a fundamenta­l aim for the containmen­t of the virus.”

Guatemalan troops have been responsibl­e for breaking up the last several attempted migrant caravans.

The increase in migrants at the border is becoming one of the major challenges confrontin­g Biden in the early months of his first term.

Numbers grew sharply during Trump’s final year in office but further accelerate­d under Biden, who quickly ended many of his predecesso­r’s policies, including one that made asylum-seekers wait in Mexico for court hearings in the U.S.

Mexicans represente­d the largest proportion of people encountere­d by the U.S. Border Patrol, and nearly all were single adults. Arrivals of people from Honduras and Guatemala were second and third, respective­ly, and more than half of the people from those countries were families or children traveling alone.

 ?? DARIO LOPEZ-MILLS/AP ?? IN THIS MARCH 30 FILE PHOTO, young unaccompan­ied migrants wait for their turn at the secondary processing station inside the U.S. Customs and Border Protection facility, the main detention center for unaccompan­ied children in the Rio Grande Valley, in Donna, Texas.
DARIO LOPEZ-MILLS/AP IN THIS MARCH 30 FILE PHOTO, young unaccompan­ied migrants wait for their turn at the secondary processing station inside the U.S. Customs and Border Protection facility, the main detention center for unaccompan­ied children in the Rio Grande Valley, in Donna, Texas.

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