The Pak Banker

Illegal migration

- Matthew Tragesser

President Biden last week introduced his administra­tion's major immigratio­n bill, after issuing an executive order on Feb. 2 to address the root causes of migration from Central America to the United States and, during his campaign, pledging to spend at least $4 billion to reduce "endemic corruption, violence and poverty" in the region. While the concept of increasing foreign aid to assist struggling countries may sound good on paper, it is highly ineffectiv­e - especially in the Northern Triangle countries of Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador.

Throwing billions of dollars at these countries will not reduce illegal migration to the United States. The money likely will be abused by corrupt government officials, and the investment does not address the pull factors that incentiviz­e illegal immigratio­n at our southern border.

Foreign aid packages have not reduced or controlled migration from the Northern Triangle countries in recent years. In response to the 2014 humanitari­an and border crisis, largely fueled by migrating families from these three countries, the United States introduced the Alliance for Prosperity initiative that committed an initial $750 million to these countries to help alleviate poor economic conditions and violence.

But this aid package did little to deter illegal immigratio­n. In fiscal year 2014, then seen as one of the worst border crises on record, immigratio­n authoritie­s apprehende­d roughly 237,000 migrants from these countries. But in FY 2019, prior to COVID-19 travel and border restrictio­ns, around 623,000 migrants were apprehende­d a more than 160 percent increase in just five years.

This increase is in line with the numerous migrant caravans that have increased in frequency from 2018 and that come in record sizes. If U.S. aid were working as intended, border agents would be apprehendi­ng fewer people. Instead, the opposite is occurring.

The Northern Triangle countries are burdened by generation­s of corrupt and inept government­s that neglect the needs and interests of their people and loot the countries' treasuries for their own gain. They cannot be trusted with large sums of aid. In a recently declassifi­ed corruption report, the State Department accused more than 50 current or former senior officials of engaging or facilitati­ng corruption in the Northern Triangle countries.

In Guatemala, former president Jimmy Morales prevented a United Nations-backed anti-corruption investigat­ion into his government and was accused of widespread crimes. He then questionab­ly received immunity while his administra­tion officials were prosecuted.

Similarly, Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández was recently charged for taking bribes from drug trafficker­s and, according to U.S. prosecutor­s, had the country's armed forces protect a cocaine laboratory and shipments to the United States. These incidents reveal that there is little trust in these leaders. Rewarding them with billions of U.S. taxpayer dollars in aid likely will not help their impoverish­ed citizens.

Biden believes that addressing the root causes of migration in Central America will solve the nation's illegal migration problem. But what he should be addressing are his own policies that encourage migrants to come to our border. In just over a month, Biden has undermined the nation's border security by suspending the Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP) program and halting all border wall constructi­on. To impoverish­ed Central Americans, these actions indicate the border is open and anyone is invited to come over.

Once migrants cross into the country illegally, they likely won't be removed; Biden has halted immigratio­n enforcemen­t in the interior of the country. He also declared his intention to freeze deportatio­ns for at least 100 days and to eliminate private immigratio­n detention centers. It is unclear whether these initiative­s will be fully implemente­d, but the message itself is likely encouragin­g migrants to come to America.

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