In Mexico, Kamala Harris has talks about immigration

Talks with Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador on the issue of illegal immigration will be held today in Mexico by the US Vice President Kamala Harris.

Harris arrived from the neighborhood Guatemala, the first stop of her first trip abroad since taking office in January, according to AMPE.

“We have convergent views on the need to help Central American countries, we need to invest in growth and jobs in Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras, and we are ready to help,” Lopez said. Obrador yesterday Monday, in his established morning press conference.

“We will have a business meeting” before “we attend signing of an agreement on migration and development “ added the Mexican president.

The first tour abroad of the American vice president, who was assigned to deal with the thorny issue of irregular immigration, is part of the promise of the Democratic president TMr. Biden to pursue a more “humane” policy than Donald Trump’s Republican predecessor.

The number of undocumented immigrants detained at the Mexico-US border reached its highest level in 15 years in April. Of the more than 178,600 immigrants, including many unaccompanied children, 82% came from Mexico and the selected Northern Triangle.

Blinken’s message to immigrants: Do not come

In Guatemala, Mrs. Harris repeated the message that US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken had sent to immigrants a few days ago: “Do not come. The United States will continue to enforce border laws and security measures. “If you come to our borders, they will take you back.”

During a conversation with conservative Guatemalan President Alejandro Yamatei, Kamala Harris said that “most people do not want to leave their homes”, but did so “because they could not meet their basic needs” or to escape “danger”. . He called on the country’s government to help address the causes of migratory flows.

“It is in our collective interest to work together where there may be an opportunity to solve chronic problems,” he said, stressing the need for “a sense of hope” and the assurance that “help is on the way”.

The Central American region is being hit hard by the youth pandemic coronavirus, poverty, gang violence, while the situation was exacerbated in 2020 by two cyclones.

But “hope does not exist by itself”, it must be based on “relationships of trust” and “tangible results”, it must “convince people that they have reason to hope for their future”.

In a country where almost 60% of the 17 million people live below the poverty line, Yamatei stressed the “need to build a wall of prosperity, especially in the areas near the border with Mexico” and create jobs. .

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