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		U.S. aid helped Guatemalan farmers stay 
		rooted to their lands 
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		 [April 05, 2019] 
		By Milton Castillo and Daina Beth Solomon 
 SANTA MARIA CHIQUIMULA, Guatemala (Reuters) 
		- After a U.S.-funded program gave Guatemalan farmer Rigoberto Leon and 
		his neighbors tools to plant new crops like tomatoes and chili peppers, 
		many of them stayed to live off their drought-prone lands even as droves 
		of villagers left for the United States.
 
 More programs like the climate change adaptation scheme backed by the 
		United States Agency for International Development (USAID) that helped 
		Leon are in jeopardy after U.S. President Donald Trump said he will end 
		Washington's aid to Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras. He has accused 
		the Central American countries of failing to halt an influx of migrants 
		to the United States.
 
 Leon fears an aid cutoff would make it harder for farmers to survive in 
		villages around the small indigenous Mayan town of Santa Maria 
		Chiquimula, in Guatemala's western highlands, which is suffering 
		deforestation and low rainfall.
 
 "Here, there's no money to invest in materials, in what's needed," he 
		said. "If there were more opportunities for work here, there would be no 
		need to go to the United States."
 
		
		 
		
 For decades, hundreds of programs throughout Central America have worked 
		to slow the steady outflow of men - and increasingly, children and 
		entire families - through efforts such as assisting farmers, educating 
		teens, improving police and strengthening governance.
 
 While these programs have not stopped the overall rise of migration, 
		proponents of international aid say the situation would be worse without 
		them and that the United States should invest more, not less.
 
 U.S. assistance expanded under former President Barack Obama, whose 
		administration sought to tackle root causes of immigration. In his last 
		full fiscal year in office, funds appropriated for Central America hit a 
		high of $754 million.
 
 That aid has steadily decreased under Trump, however, to $700 million 
		the first year and to $627 million in 2018.
 
 Leon, who grows hundreds of pine tree seedlings in a greenhouse equipped 
		with a sprinkler-based irrigation system, both donated by USAID, said 
		the number of families he knew living off the dry hillside more than 
		doubled to 40 as a result of the program, which ran from 2014 to 2017.
 
 Local project organizers say they still receive bare-bones U.S. funding 
		to organize training, but are lobbying for more in order to buy storage 
		tanks and tubing to bring water from a nearby river.
 
 The Mayan people suffer some of the highest poverty rates in Latin 
		America. Guatemala's paltry tax take and low public investment have 
		contributed to worsening social indicators.
 
		
		 
		Sebastian Charchalac, an agricultural engineer who helped lead the 
		climate change program, lamented that its funding evaporated after Trump 
		took office, saying it could have been extended to additional locations.
 "The results are still very good, because they rooted people to their 
		communities," he said.
 
 While data is not clear on which projects have been affected by the 
		change in government, the Trump administration has signaled a desire to 
		shift funding away from economic aid and climate change-oriented 
		programs, in favor of security and policing.
 
 USAID did not respond to a question about why funding was reduced for 
		the Santa Maria program. Instead, it said it was evaluating the impact 
		of Trump's directive to end fiscal year 2017 foreign assistance funding.
 
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			Tomatoes produced by the community for self-supply and for sale are 
			pictured at a greenhouse, as part of a farming program backed by 
			U.S. Aid, in the small village of Xecachelaj, Santa Maria 
			Chiquimula, Guatemala April 3, 2019. Picture taken April 3, 2019. 
			REUTERS/Luis Echeverria 
            
 
            Approximately $450 million in 2018 funds would be affected, they 
			said.
 It is also unclear how much funding Trump can cut off without the 
			support of Congress.
 
 Rachael Shenyo, a former USAID coordinator in Guatemala who now runs 
			climate change programs funded by non-profit groups and the private 
			sector, said further reductions in U.S. assistance would create an 
			opportunity for China.
 
 Since 2017, El Salvador, Panama and the Dominican Republic have all 
			forged closer ties with Beijing, Washington's strategic rival.
 
 "China has been increasing its presence more or less across Latin 
			America. You're going to see a lot more investment," Shenyo said.
 
 
 
 SELF-SUFFICIENCY
 
 Critics of foreign aid say it is not always effective, or helps only 
			small numbers of people, while sometimes acting as a political tool 
			and forcing an underdeveloped country to become dependent on a 
			stronger one.
 
 In El Salvador, where migration has been shrinking along with the 
			homicide rate, President-Elect Nayib Bukele said he welcomes 
			funding, but that he wants the country to ultimately stop relying on 
			outside help.
 
 "We Salvadorans should be self-sufficient," he told reporters this 
			week. "It's somewhat a sense of low self-esteem to think that we 
			can't get ahead without humanitarian aid."
 
            
			 
			U.S. help in El Salvador includes training police and developing 
			strategy. Ever Manzano, the country's police spokesman, said he did 
			not think Trump's vow to cut aid would materialize.
 "They have a lot of interest and have had a big presence, 
			substantial investment, and excellent relations with the police 
			force," he said.
 
 U.S. Representative Eliot Engel, the Democratic chairman of the 
			House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee, said ending aid 
			would make it harder for Trump to crack down on gangs and crime.
 
 During a visit last week to El Salvador, he visited a program that 
			teaches software coding to teens to steer them from crime, and an 
			FBI-backed anti-gang project.
 
 "We're cutting off our nose to spite our face. The very things 
			(Trump's) complaining about, will make it tougher for us to do," 
			said Engel.
 
 (Reporting by Daina Beth Solomon in Mexico City; additional 
			reporting by Milton Castillo in Santa Maria Chiquimula, Guatemala, 
			Nelson Renteria in San Salvador, Patricia Zengerle, Richard Cowan 
			and Arshad Mohammed in Washington; writing by Daina Beth Solomon; 
			editing by G Crosse)
 
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