San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

SKEPTICISM MEETS MIGRANT SMUGGLER CRACKDOWN IN GUATEMALA

Officials say possible stiffer punishment won’t dissuade them

- BY SONIA PEREZ D. Perez writes for The Associated Press.

Eager to show it’s trying to slow the steady flow of its people north to the United States, Guatemala recently tripled prison sentences for migrant smugglers.

The day after Guatemala’s legislatur­e approved the measure in February, 18year-old Yashira Hernandez left her home near the Mexican border for the trip north — hiring a smuggler to help.

A month later, Hernandez was back, deported from the U.S., fretting over her family’s debt and contemplat­ing a second attempt — again with her smuggler.

While the legal reform is supposed to dissuade smugglers and cast the government as a willing partner of the U.S. in managing migration, experts and lawmakers say it will only make the trip more expensive. The poverty, violence and other factors pushing Guatemalan­s to migrate remain strong and the smuggling networks continue to ply their trade — sometimes with the help of public officials.

Possible prison sentences hold little importance if those responsibl­e rarely make it to trial.

Guatemala’s government says it is preparing for further increased migration due to a decision announced Friday by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control to end a system limiting asylum at the southwest border on May 23. That policy had been based on reducing the spread of COVID-19 during the pandemic.

Officials throughout the region expect migrant smugglers to seize on the policy change to drum up more business with misinforma­tion about the sort of reception migrants will meet.

Guatemala’s immigratio­n agency said it was forming a multidisci­plinary group to respond to changes in migration flows, including securing the country’s borders.

In 2020, more than 21,000 Guatemalan­s were deported home from the U.S., but prosecutor­s only charged 12 people in connection with migrant smuggling, according to data from the Attorney General’s Office, said lawmaker Andrea Villagran. Only four of the 12 were convicted.

“You have to see the lack of capacity the Attorney General’s Office has to bring these criminal structures to justice,” said Villagran, who voted against the reform. “The law change is only a show. What this law did was increase the price of smuggling. If the problem isn’t really resolved, the people are going to continue wanting to migrate.”

Villagran also said there’s little motivation for the government to slow migration.

“The interest is in continuing to export Guatemalan­s so they can continue sending remittance­s and continue sustaining this country’s economy,” she said. Last year, despite the global pandemic, Guatemalan­s sent home $15 billion.

Hernandez said she decided to leave last month to escape poverty. Her family scraped together thousands of dollars to hire a smuggler, but in a month’s time she was back where she started, now with a massive debt that is virtually unpayable if she stays in Guatemala.

She was unaware that the penalties for migrant smuggling had risen to 30 years from 10, now on par with sentences for kidnapping and murder.

“Here there’s no work and a lot of violence,” Hernandez said.

The tougher sentences were proposed by the office of President Alejandro Giammattei. His relationsh­ip with Washington has been tense, in part because the U.S. government has listed corruption as one of the root causes of immigratio­n in Central America and has accused his administra­tion of underminin­g Guatemala’s justice system while inventing charges to prosecute anticorrup­tion crusaders.

Ursula Roldan, a migration expert at the Rafael Landivar University, said that while poverty and corruption remain rampant, emigration will continue.

She notes that deportatio­ns from the U.S. have fallen even as Guatemalan emigration continues. “It’s not that people aren’t trying to leave Guatemala. It’s that the containmen­t is in Mexico, at the southern and northern borders,” she said. “That’s where the problem is building.”

“People keep migrating because the structural causes of migration are still there, they haven’t changed,” Roldan said.

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