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						Reeling from tariff threat, Mexico begins immigration 
						talks in Washington
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		 [June 03, 2019]   
		By Frank Jack Daniel 
 MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Fighting to stave 
		off punitive tariffs announced by U.S. President Donald Trump, a senior 
		Mexican delegation was set to begin high level talks on Monday in 
		Washington, where it will be pushed to do more to hold back Central 
		American migrants.
 
 Trump says he will apply tariffs of 5% on all Mexican goods on June 10, 
		and increase the rate in coming months to 25% if Mexico does not 
		substantially halt illegal immigration across the U.S.-Mexican border, 
		which is at a decade high this year.
 
 Global equities tumbled after Trump's unexpected threat last week 
		against the United States biggest trade partner, as investors feared his 
		aggressive trade diplomacy could tip the United States and other major 
		economies into recession.
 
 With just a week until the first tariffs bite, the delegation led by 
		Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard may have a hard time convincing U.S. 
		officials that Mexico is doing enough on immigration to avoid 
		punishment, despite having signaled in recent days it was prepared to 
		further tighten security.
 
		
		 
		
 The U.S.-Mexican talks begin on Monday with a meeting between Mexican 
		Economy Secretary Graciela Marquez and U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur 
		Ross. On Wednesday, Ebrard meets U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.
 
 Trump on Sunday called Mexico an "abuser" of the United States and said 
		he wanted action, not talk. Mexico has signaled it would retaliate to 
		the tariffs, with targets likely to include farm products on Trump 
		supporting states.
 
 In a possible sign of U.S. priorities in the talks, which are due to run 
		through at least Wednesday, Department of Homeland Security (DHS) acting 
		Secretary Kevin McAleenan said on Sunday that Mexico should deploy more 
		personnel to interdict illegal migrants along a 150 mile (241.4 km) 
		stretch of border with Guatemala.
 
 That border is a remote region of mostly jungle and river, and has 
		traditionally been hard to police. The causes of Central American 
		immigration are mainly related to lack of economic opportunity and 
		rampant violence.
 
 McAleenan also said Mexico should bolster its own immigration screenings 
		along its southern border, crack down on networks transporting migrants 
		and enable more migrants to wait in Mexico while they apply for asylum 
		in the United States.
 
 Since January the government of President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador 
		has ramped up detentions and deportations, but that has not been enough 
		to stop the growing tide of families reaching the United States, mainly 
		from Guatemala and Honduras.
 
 In May, numbers are expected to have outpaced the 99,000 people 
		apprehended at the border in April, with many of those crossing in 
		groups of families who will mostly be released to await asylum hearings 
		in the United States.
 
		
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			Vehicles and people cross the border bridge into the U.S., as seen 
			from Laredo, Texas, U.S. June 2, 2019. REUTERS/Carlos Jasso 
            
			 
In its biggest concession to Trump so far, Mexico agreed in December to receive 
some Central Americans seeking asylum in the United States to await the 
resolution of their cases.
 So far more than 6,000 people have been sent into Mexico under the program, 
which operates at three crossings and is commonly known as "Remain in Mexico".
 
DHS intends to increase the number of returns under "Remain in Mexico", a 
spokeswoman said on Saturday, saying there were plans to expand the program, 
although new crossings had not been officially designated.
 A more radical idea that has long been promoted by the DHS and may again be on 
the table in talks this week despite previously being a red line for Lopez 
Obrador, is to make Central Americans apply for Mexican asylum, not U.S. asylum.
 
 Under this policy, Mexico could be declared a "safe third country." Rights 
groups argue that leaving asylum seekers in Mexico puts them at risk, since it 
suffers from similar levels of violence to the places they are fleeing.
 
 The ultimatum from Trump is the biggest foreign policy test to date for Lopez 
Obrador. Aside from struggling to combat migrant flows, Mexican security forces 
are also fighting endemic gang violence.
 
 In a series of tweets on Sunday, Trump extended his demands on Mexico beyond 
immigration, demanding it stopped an "invasion" of drug dealers and cartels.
 
 In April, Trump took a step back from an earlier threat to completely close the 
U.S. border with Mexico to fight illegal immigration, under pressure from 
companies worried it would cause chaos for businesses.
 
 
Mexico's economy, which is heavily reliant on exports to the United States, 
shrank in the first quarter and would suffer a lot more if Trump were to jack 
tariffs up all the way to 25 percent.
 Trump's aggressive trade diplomacy, both with Mexico and China, has scared 
investors away from riskier assets in global markets, as they fear it could tip 
the United States and other major economies in to recession.
 
 (Additional reporting by Kristina Cooke in San Francisco; Editing by Simon 
Cameron-Moore)
 
				 
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