Mexico, for its part, will continue accepting back migrants
returned to the country on humanitarian grounds, both nations
said in a joint statement.
The announcement comes as the U.S. prepares for the end of the
Title 42 policy and a possible subsequent spike in illegal
border crossings.
The U.S. has said it plans to ramp up deportations after May 11.
Mexico has been accepting migrants deported from the United
States under the Title 42 policy, which allows the U.S. to
rapidly expel migrants including Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans
and Venezuelans illegally entering the U.S.
A U.S. official said last week that the U.S. intends to continue
expelling migrants of those four nationalities back to Mexico
after the program's end date.
The statement came after Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez
Obrador met with White House Homeland Security Advisor Elizabeth
Sherwood-Randall earlier in the day to discuss migration ahead
of Title 42's impending end.
Tuesday's announcement indicates that a U.S. humanitarian parole
program providing legal migration pathways for Cubans, Haitians,
Nicaraguans, and Venezuelans will continue after May 11.
Sherwood-Randall told Mexican authorities "that the humanitarian
parole program will continue," Mexican Foreign Minister Marcelo
Ebrard told journalists following the meeting.
Mexico also pushed for the further expansion of the program, as
well as other legal pathways to entering the United States,
Ebrard added.
The two countries also said the United States would accept some
100,000 people from El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras under a
family reunification program announced last week, but did not
give a time frame for that number.
Additionally, the countries agreed to boost efforts to combat
human smuggling following a U.S. agreement with Colombia and
Panama to curb migration through the dangerous jungle region
separating the two nations.
(Reporting by Brendan O'Boyle; Editing by Stephen Coates)
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