Stabroek News

Harris takes on graft in Guatemala and tells migrants 'do not come'

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GUATEMALA CITY, (Reuters) U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris said yesterday she had "robust" talks with Guatemalan President Alejandro Giammattei on fighting corruption to deter immigratio­n from Central America and bluntly warned migrants to not come to the United States.

Since President Joe Biden took office in January, the number of migrants taken into custody per month at the U.S. Mexico border has risen to the highest levels in 20 years

"Do not come. Do not come. The United States will continue to enforce our laws and secure our borders," Harris said at a news conference alongside Giammattei. "If you come to our border, you will be turned back."

Harris also said a U.S. anti-corruption task force would work with local prosecutor­s to punish corrupt actors in the region.

The Biden administra­tion has identified corruption as an underlying cause of the poverty and violence driving record numbers of Central Americans to go to the United States.

The corruption task force has been previously floated, but Harris gave more details, saying it will combine

resources from the Justice, State and Treasury department­s.

In the build-up to Harris' visit to Guatemala, her first official overseas trip, difference­s of opinion emerged about the fight against graft, with corruption fighters feted by Washington being criticized by Giammattei.

"We had a robust, candid and thorough conversati­on," Harris said at the news conference after a three-hour meeting with Giammattei, who said they had discussed U.S. concerns about developmen­ts in Guatemala.

"The president and I discussed the importance of anti-corruption and the importance of an independen­t judiciary," Harris said. Washington has criticized the removal of a senior judge from Guatemala's top court, in what Giammattei has argued was a legitimate process.

Giammattei defended his own record in fighting malfeasanc­e, saying he had not been accused of wrongdoing and saying graft was not only a problem faced by politician­s. The fight against drug traffickin­g needed to be an integral part of tackling corruption, he said.

On the immigratio­n front he announced a new processing center for migrants sent back from Mexico and the United States, which could increase capacity. He said the focus of the two countries should be on creating prosperity.

Most Guatemalan migrants leave because of poverty, he said, and come from a few rural municipali­ties. Harris, a Democratic former U.S. senator from California, responded to Republican criticism against her for not visiting the U.S.Mexico border and the administra­tion for ignoring what they say is a crisis there. She said she was working on the ground in Guatemala.

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Kamala Harris

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