New Straits Times

US seeks Canada’s help to ease crowding at Mexico border

- Reuters

The United States is looking to Canada to help cope with the growing number of migrants at its border with Mexico, a State Department spokesman said on Tuesday.

A possible trilateral agreement with Canada, the US and Mexico was on the table as the three countries met in Mexico for the North American Leaders’ Summit, spokesman Kristina Rosales said.

The agreement would help thousands immigrate through legal channels, without having to put their lives at risk at the hands of human trafficker­s, Rosales said.

“Canada has its own specific programs for refuge and migration,” Rosales said, adding that ahead of the trilateral talks, the countries would discuss Canada’s involvemen­t.

No such agreement was made public immediatel­y after the talks between US President Joe Biden, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador ended on Tuesday.

US authoritie­s detained 2.2 million migrants at the border with Mexico in fiscal year 2022, a record not seen since World War 2.

Rosales also said the US was considerin­g including more nationalit­ies to enter the country by air while expelling those crossing over land under an order known as Title 42.

The order, launched in October for Venezuelan­s, was expanded to Cuban, Nicaraguan and Haitian migrants last week.

Encounters of Venezuelan­s at the border dropped about 90 per

cent last month, and similar drops were expected for other migrants in the programme.

“If we see that we have to increase the number of those eligible for humanitari­an parole per month and include other nationalit­ies, we will consider it,” Rosales added.

Mexico’s Lopez Obrador on Tuesday said the nation “celebrated” the US decision to award humanitari­an parole and that he believed “that this plan will be extended to benefit other countries”.

The US has, in recent months,

seen a significan­t increase in migrants reaching the country by sea from Caribbean countries such as Cuba and Haiti.

Rosales said those who arrived in the US by sea “unfortunat­ely will not be able to qualify” for humanitari­an parole.

Rosales added that the US government was seeking to broaden legal methods of immigratin­g and sway potential migrants from paying human trafficker­s.

“We want to broaden the legal channels so that people can apply directly from their cell phones.”

 ?? EPA PIC ?? Migrants lining up to carry out immigratio­n procedures in the city of Tapachula, Chiapas, Mexico, on Tuesday.
EPA PIC Migrants lining up to carry out immigratio­n procedures in the city of Tapachula, Chiapas, Mexico, on Tuesday.

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