The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Central Americans fear that Trump will cut vital lifeline

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We are so worried. Immigratio­n agents went to a place close to where she lives. Jose Corpeno,

INTIPUC, El Salvador: Families across Central America are living in fear that US President Donald Trump’s anti-immigratio­n policies will stem the vital flow of money sent home by migrants each year.

The concern is that relatives who have emigrated without authorisat­ion will be deported, suddenly ending the billions of dollars in annual remittance­s sent to their impoverish­ed countries.

There are millions of Central Americans living legally in the US – but also 1.7 million unauthoris­ed migrants from the region, according to estimates by the Pew Research Center.

Most of them come from the poorest, gang-ridden three countries known as the Northern Triangle – Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras.

Intipuca, a town south of El Salvador’s capital, symbolizes the life-changing value of the US dollars sent back home. The town features big, colored houses adorned with iron-forged moldings that stand empty.

Their owners live in the US, and return only for special occasions like Christmas, weddings and family events.

In the park in front of the town hall there is a statue dedicated to Sigifrido Chavez, who in 1967 became the first local to migrate to the US. Near the statue Jose Corpeno paces around as he speaks into a cellphone.

He explains that he was talking with his daughter, who has been living in the US state of Maryland for a year and now “is living a nightmare”.

“We are so worried. Immigratio­n agents went to a place close to where she lives,” Corpeno said.

The daughter paid a smuggler 10,000 to lead her up north, and now she is living without authorisat­ion in the US.

“She’s working. But she’s afraid that at any moment she could be found out and detained,” Corpeno said.

The money the woman sends goes to a small plot of corn that her family depends on to survive.

“If she ends up being deported, then we’ll be in a bad way. We are poor, and the money she sends helps us,” Corpeno said.

The same anxiety is felt in Guatemala.

Victoria Flores, 70, said she relies on her 50-year-old son Estuardo, who works as a dental technician in Los Angeles and whose remittance­s pay the mortgage, electricit­y, water and telephone service where she lived.

“This is a difficult situation, with worries every day because this president (Trump) has said that he will deport all the illegals from the US,” Flores told AFP.

The small woman called that policy “unfair”.

But she also lays part of the blame on Trump’s predecesso­r, Barack Obama for overseeing changes in US migration law.

Remittance­s make up a significan­t chunk of the economy in the Northern Triangle countries, so any decline would be felt immediatly.

“Ninety per cent of remittance­s go to consumptio­n, and any decline will impact consumptio­n and tax income,” said Mauricio Diaz, a coordinato­r in FOSDEH, a non-government­al Honduran body that monitors the country’s external debt and developmen­t.

In Honduras, remittance­s received amounted to US$3.9 billion last year.

In El Salvador, it was US$4.6 billion, or 16 per cent of gross domestic product.

Guatemala, the most populous country in Central America, received more: US$7.1 billion in 2016 – an amount nearly as big as the US$10 billion it makes in exports.

US aid to try to stem the violence and poverty in those countries was increased at the end of Obama’s term, but has so far had little effect. — AFP

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 ??  ?? Trump delivers remarks at the American Center for Mobility, a test facility for driverless car technology for American Manufactur­ed Vehicles in Ypsilanti Township, Michigan, US. Families across Central America are living in fear that US President...
Trump delivers remarks at the American Center for Mobility, a test facility for driverless car technology for American Manufactur­ed Vehicles in Ypsilanti Township, Michigan, US. Families across Central America are living in fear that US President...

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