Texas, Chihuahua governors agree on deal to return border truck traffic
to normal
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[April 15, 2022]
By Ted Hesson and Carolina Pulice
WASHINGTON/MEXICO CITY (Reuters)
-Commercial truck traffic from the Mexican state of Chihuahua to Texas
will return to normal immediately after both sides reached an agreement
on border security, Texas Governor Greg Abbott said on Thursday.
The state of Chihuahua provided a plan that will allow Texas authorities
to cease enhanced inspections that have led to backups of trucks from
Chihuahua over the past week, Abbott said during a joint press
conference with Chihuahua Governor Maria Eugenia Campos Galvan.
"Texas and Chihuahua now have agreed to both secure the border as well
to get commercial vehicles moving through the ports," Abbott said.
Abbott, a Republican running for reelection in November, ordered the
state's Department of Public Safety last week to conduct "enhanced
safety inspections" of vehicles as they cross from Mexico into Texas in
order to uncover smuggling of people and contraband.
The inspections were part of a broader effort to deter illegal
immigration aimed to counter the "open borders" policies of Democratic
President Joe Biden, Abbott said.
Abbott also signed an agreement on Thursday with Coahuila Governor
Miguel Angel Riquelme Solis, in which both states pledged to work to
reduce illegal immigration and ensure vehicles crossing the border meet
safety standards.
Mexican truck drivers blockaded bridges at the U.S. border earlier in
the week to protest the delays, which some drivers said caused waits
that spanned more than half a day.
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Trucks wait in a queue to cross into the United States in the
Cordova of the Americas International border bridge connecting the
city of Ciudad Juarez to El Paso, Texas, after Texas Governor, Greg
Abbott announced that traffic commercial trucks from Chihuahua to
Texas will return to normal immediately after a border security
agreement with the governor of the Mexican state, in Ciudad Juarez,
Mexico April 14, 2022. REUTERS/Jose Luis Gonzalez
Texas would cease enhanced
inspections from the Mexican state of Nuevo Leon after a separate
border security agreement with the governor there, Abbott said.
The inspections will continue at other parts of the border with
Mexico until agreements with those states have been reached, Abbott
said.
Some Mexican truckers praised the new arrangement.
"This is excellent news, right now I have two trucks lined up
waiting to cross the Pharr (border bridge) two for Progreso," said
Juan Trevino, owner of several trucks in the border state of
Tamaulipas. "We hope that this can be normalized soon because it has
been a very difficult time for us."
Other truckers remained skeptical.
"Well, my comrades say that the roads still aren't as open as
before. Until yesterday, nothing had changed. I spent 16 hours in
the queue and I couldn't cross ... I'll believe it when I see it,"
said Pedro Gonzalez, a truck driver in Ciudad Juarez.
(Reporting by Ted Hesson and Carolina Pulice; Additional reporting
by Lizbeth Diaz in Mexico City; Editing by Grant McCool)
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