Las Vegas Review-Journal

Giammattei: Guatemala can’t do deal with U.S.

President-elect: Nation unable to take migrants

- By Sonia Perez D. The Associated Press

GUATEMALA CITY — A Guatemalan immigratio­n agreement signed with the Trump administra­tion won’t work because the Central American nation does not have the resources, the country’s new president-elect says.

Alejandro Giammattei, a conservati­ve who was chosen overwhelmi­ngly by voters in a weekend runoff election, said in an interview with The Associated Press on Tuesday that Guatemala is too poor to tend to its own people, let alone those from other countries.

The agreement signed in July by the outgoing administra­tion of President Jimmy Morales would require migrants from other countries who cross into Guatemala to apply for asylum there rather than in the U.S.

“In order to be a safe country, one has to be certified as such by an internatio­nal body, and I do not think Guatemala fulfills the requiremen­ts to be a third safe country. That definition doesn’t fit us,” said Giammattei, a 63-year-old doctor.

“If we do not have the capacity for our own people, just imagine other people.”

Guatemalan­s make up one of the largest groups emigrating from Central America because of poverty, unemployme­nt and crime. Critics say it is hard to see how the country could offer a safe haven to migrants from other nations.

The agreement signed by the current Morales government is aimed at reducing the number of asylum seekers arriving at the U.s.-mexico border. U.S. President Donald Trump’s administra­tion pressured Guatemala to sign the deal by threatenin­g to punish Guatemala with taxes.

Giammattei, who takes office Jan. 14, said that annexes to the agreement are still being negotiated with the United States and that he would ask Morales to include members of his transition team in those talks.

The president-elect also noted that the agreement would have to be ratified by the congresses of both nations to go into force. There has been widespread criticism of the deal in Guatemala.

Giammattei pledged to recognize the importance of Guatemalan migrants living in the United States by creating a Washington-based Cabinet-level position to attend to migrant affairs. ‘I

do not think physical walls, or walls of weapons, can stop migration. I think what can stop migration are

opportunit­ies.’ walls of

“It is about time we had a government that cared for the people,” he said. “It is these people (migrants) who are supporting us” with the remittance money they send back to relatives in Guatemala, he added.

“I do not think physical walls, or walls of weapons, can stop migration,” Giammattei said. “I think what can stop migration are walls of opportunit­ies.”

On another matter, the incoming leader distanced himself from Morales’ unpopular decision to not renew the mandate of the U.n.-sponsored anti-corruption commission that has played a key role in sending high-ranking politician­s, including ex-presidents, to jail.

But Giammattei also indicated he wouldn’t work to bring back the commission, known as CICIG.

“The mandate has been terminated; the United Nations accepted that,” he said.

He said he has no legal capacity or any other authority to ask Morales to renew the commission.

“The CICIG is disappeari­ng and history will judge whether Morales’ decision was right or not,” he said.

 ?? Oliver de Ros The Associated Press ?? Guatemala’s President-elect Alejandro Giammattei gives an interview Tuesday in Guatemala City. Giammattei said his country can’t hold up its side of an immigratio­n agreement with the U.S. or serve as a “safe third country” for asylum seekers.
Oliver de Ros The Associated Press Guatemala’s President-elect Alejandro Giammattei gives an interview Tuesday in Guatemala City. Giammattei said his country can’t hold up its side of an immigratio­n agreement with the U.S. or serve as a “safe third country” for asylum seekers.

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