U.S. continues plan to keep Central American migrants at bay
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[February 12, 2021]
By Laura Gottesdiener, Frank Jack Daniel and Ted Hesson
CIUDAD HIDALGO, Mexico (Reuters) - In the
days before U.S. President Joe Biden's inauguration, Mexican soldiers
patrolling the banks of the wide Suchiate River found few migrants amid
the flow of trade across the water from Guatemala.
The likely explanation lay hundreds of miles to the south, where
baton-wielding Guatemalan security forces beat back one the largest
U.S.-bound migrant caravans ever assembled, according to a Reuters
photographer and other witnesses.
"We're scared," Honduran migrant Rosa Alvarez told a reporter by
telephone as she fled with many others toward the nearby hills, two
young children in tow.
The operation was part of a U.S.-led effort, pursued by past American
administrations and accelerated under former President Donald Trump, to
pressure first the Mexican and then the Central American governments to
halt migration well short of the U.S. border.
Under the Biden administration, the same general strategy is likely to
continue, at least for the near term, according to six U.S. and Mexican
sources with knowledge of diplomatic discussions.
Biden has been gradually unraveling many Trump-era immigration policies.
Yet the new administration has encouraged Mexico and Guatemala to keep
up border enforcement in their countries to stem northward migration,
according to two Mexican officials and a U.S official, all speaking on
condition of anonymity.
Diplomats and experts at immigration think tanks told Reuters that it
would be politically expedient for the Biden administration to keep
asylum seekers and other migrants from trekking en masse to the
country's southern border, especially as Mexico and the United States
are being ravaged by the coronavirus pandemic and seeking to contain its
spread.
They also said any rush to the U.S border could hand Biden’s political
opponents ammunition to sink the rest of his immigration agenda, which
includes providing a pathway to citizenship for immigrants already in
the United States and reducing asylum application backlogs.
The Biden administration has not specifically endorsed militarized
action, however, and has vowed to treat migrants with dignity.
"They want the relevant countries to have appropriate border controls,"
said one former U.S. official familiar with the matter, who also spoke
on condition of anonymity. "It doesn't mean that they hold everyone back
and beat back migrants. That's not the objective here."
A White House spokesperson declined to comment, referring Reuters to
recent public remarks by Roberta Jacobson, a special assistant to the
president specializing on the southwest border.
Jacobson told reporters on a recent call that the administration had not
talked with Mexico specifically about how it deploys its security forces
on its own soil. She added, however, that the two countries' diplomats,
as well as Biden and Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, had
spoken about the need to jointly work on managing migration. She
stressed the importance of addressing its root causes such as poverty
and corruption.
Two other administration officials, including Juan Gonzalez, the
president's lead adviser on Latin American policy, recently underscored
U.S. support for immigration enforcement well south of the U.S. border.
"I need to recognize here the work that (Guatemalan) President
(Alejandro) Giammattei has done in managing the migration flows when the
caravans started out," Gonzalez told the El Salvadoran investigative
website El Faro after the January crackdown.
The Mexican government has informed the new U.S. administration that it
intends to keep current immigration enforcement measures in place
because it is in Mexico's sovereign interest to secure its own borders,
one senior Mexican official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Biden already faces pressure from leading Republican lawmakers who
accuse his administration of undermining immigration enforcement.
The new administration has "sketched out a massive proposal for blanket
amnesty that would gut enforcement of American laws while creating huge
new incentives for people to rush here illegally at the same time,"
Republican Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky said on
the Senate floor after Biden's first day in office.
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Hondurans taking part in a new caravan of migrants, set to head to
the United States, gather in front of police officers blocking the
road in Vado Hondo, Guatemala January 18, 2021. REUTERS/Luis
Echeverria/File Photo
Biden officials have repeatedly pleaded with asylum seekers not to
migrate now, stressing that the administration needs time to enact
its domestic immigration changes.
At the same time, human rights advocates say leaning on Mexico and
Central America to halt mass migration violates people's rights to
seek asylum. It also potentially subjects them to further violence
and abuse on their journeys north, they say.
"We've seen time and time again that militarized approaches don't
really stop people from leaving," said Daniella Burgi-Palomino,
co-director of the Latin America Working Group, an organization
dedicated to influencing U.S. policy.
'REGIONAL CONTAINMENT'
About 8,000 people, including many women and children, joined
January's migrant caravan shortly before Biden's inauguration,
aiming to arrive in the United States after he took office.
The Trump administration had all but locked down the U.S. southern
border and forced some asylum applicants to wait for months in
Mexico. It also had prodded Mexican and Central American
governments, largely through threats, to confront migrant caravans.
For instance, Mexico in 2019 deployed 20,000 National Guard and
soldiers to police its borders to stave off Trump's threats to
impose tariffs on Mexican goods.
Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras coordinated a regional
containment strategy ahead of the January caravan, Martin Alonso
Borrego, director of Latin America and the Caribbean for Mexico's
foreign ministry, told Reuters.
After a Jan. 11 meeting among the countries, Guatemala declared
emergency powers in nearly a third of its states and deployed up to
4,000 soldiers, police officers and air force personnel.
As Biden's inauguration approached, rumors that a large migrant
group was forming in Honduras prompted Mexico to beef up its
military presence at its own southern border and send buses to
Guatemala to aid in the return of caravan members.
The crackdown in mid-January provided some respite to Mexican troops
on the Suchiate River. It also inspired fear among migrants.
Honduran migrant Alvarez and her family spent days in Guatemala's
hills trying to make their way toward the Mexican border. "We're
without money and food," she said, before Reuters lost touch with
her.
In the mid-January confrontation in Guatemala, the Reuters
photographer and other witnesses saw a wall of security forces
confront hundreds of migrants, beating some and deploying tear gas.
Some migrants threw rocks. Guatemalan immigration authorities
reported an unspecified number of injuries.
Guatemala's human rights ombudsman Jordan Rodas said "it was
outrageous to see the scenes of how the military brutally received
our Honduran brothers and sisters."
Immigration experts and people familiar with the Biden
administration's thinking say Washington may try to exercise more
oversight down the line over how Mexican and Central American
authorities conduct border containment operations.
Proponents of greater U.S. immigration control say it would be a
mistake to pull back on the Trump-era pressure.
"It's not clear how effectively Guatemala and Mexico can block them,
especially if the numbers get bigger and especially if they are not
pressured to do so by Biden," said Jessica Vaughan, policy director
for the Center for Immigration Studies, which favors lower levels of
immigration.
(Laura Gottesdiener reported from Ciudad Hidalgo, Mexico, and Mexico
City; Frank Jack Daniel from Mexico City, and Ted Hesson from
Washington, D.C. Additional reporting by Luis Echeverria in Vado
Hondo, Guatemala; Sofía Menchu in Guatemala City, Dave Graham and
Lizbeth Diaz in Mexico City, and Mimi Dwyer in Los Angeles. Editing
by Julie Marquis)
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