U.S. unveils $310 million in Central America aid, as Guatemala agrees to
work together on migration
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[April 27, 2021]
By Nandita Bose and Sofia Menchu
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Vice President
Kamala Harris unveiled an additional $310 million in U.S. aid to Central
America after a virtual meeting with Guatemalan President Alejandro
Giammattei on Monday, as the two countries agreed to work together to
control migration.
President Joe Biden gave Harris the job of leading U.S. efforts with
Mexico and Central America's Northern Triangle countries - Honduras, El
Salvador and Guatemala - to stop a growing number of migrants from
crossing into the United States.
"We want to work with you ... in a way that will bring hope to the
people of Guatemala, that there will be an opportunity for them if they
stay at home," Harris said, adding she would visit the region in June.
In a statement, her office said the funds would come from USAID, along
with the Departments of State, Defense and Agriculture.
For example, the humanitarian aid includes $125 million to deal with
repeated droughts, food shortages and the COVID-19 pandemic, along with
$104 million from the U.S. State Department to help with the safety and
protection of refugees and asylum seekers.
The U.S. Defense Department will provide $26 million to increase
partnership activities in the region aimed at health, education and
disaster relief services, according to the vice president's office.
Back-to-back hurricanes and the economic impact of the pandemic in 2020
have increased the number of people facing hunger this year in
Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador to 7.8 million, according to the
World Food Programme.
Following the Harris-Giammattei meeting, Guatemalan Foreign Minister
Pedro Brolo told a news conference that Guatemala and the United States
agreed "to establish a new joint border protection task force,"
including a small number of officials from the U.S. Department of
Homeland Security.
He said about 16 DHS officials would initially travel to Guatemala to
train local officials in strengthening border infrastructure.
Under former U.S. President Donald Trump, a small group of DHS officials
also operated in Guatemala for a time.
Brolo said Harris also spoke of helping build centers for deportees and
beefing up security at Guatemala's ports. Guatemala will send a team to
the United States to help reunify unaccompanied Guatemalan minors with
their parents, he said
In March, Mexico said more than unaccompanied 18,000 Central American
children crossed its territory en route to the United States.
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Vice President Kamala Harris, after a meeting with Guatemalan
President Alejandro Giammattei on Monday, said the United States
wants to increase aid to the region and manage migration in a secure
and humane way as she looks for ways to defuse a migrant crisis at
the U.S. border with Mexico. Bryan Wood reports.
Brolo laid some of the blame for increased migration
on Biden, saying people smugglers used expectations of "greater
benefits" for migrants that emerged with the arrival of the new U.S.
administration to persuade more people to travel.
'VERY HARD ROAD'
Monday's meeting was Harris' second conversation with Guatemala's
leader in less than a month - a sign of the best opportunity she has
to build a partnership in the region.
Harris has yet to speak with the leaders of Honduras and El
Salvador.
Giammattei said Guatemala was looking forward to her visit but wants
to reach an agreement on issues before she travels.
"I believe that we should build a road map between governments ...
so that we can reach an agreement... (and) can work on this very
hard road that we have ahead of us," he said.
Challenges surfaced during their first call, when Giammattei asked
Harris about the possibility of purchasing COVID-19 vaccines,
officials told Reuters. The question was not included in the U.S.
readout of the call.
On April 5, Guatemala said it was purchasing 16 million Russian
Sputnik V vaccines to inoculate about half its population.
Harris' office did not comment on the issue, but an administration
official said it was not politically tenable to assure vaccine
supplies to other countries before inoculating every American.
Other problems have also emerged. Guatemalan lawmakers recently
refused to swear in a corruption-fighting judge, Constitutional
Court President Gloria Porras, whom U.S. officials had seen as key
to the country's fight against graft.
Hours before the call with Giammattei, the United States and the UK
imposed sanctions on a member of Guatemala's Congress over alleged
corruption.
Harris will participate in a virtual roundtable with representatives
from Guatemalan community based-organizations on Tuesday.
(Reporting by Nandita Bose in Washington and Sofia Menchu in
Guatemala; Additional reporting by Merdie Nzanga in Washington;
Editing by Dan Grebler, Peter Cooney and Himani Sarkar)
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