“No mass deportations” from U.S, Secretary Kelly promises Mexico

Mark Ross
By Mark Ross
February 24, 2017US News
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Senior Mexican officials on Thursday (February 23) expressed “worry and irritation” about U.S. policies during a visit by two of President Donald Trump’s top envoys, who in turn sought to cool tempers after weeks of tension between the neighbors.

“We’ve also talked about the legal impossibility of a government to make decisions that will affect another government in a unilateral fashion,” Foreign Minister Luis Videgaray told a joint news conference.

Videgaray was speaking after talks in the Mexican capital with U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and Homeland Security chief John Kelly.

Videgaray said it is “a complex time” for U.S.-Mexican relations, which have gone downhill quickly since Donald Trump was elected U.S. president last November.

The U.S. government this week angered Mexico by saying it was seeking to deport many illegal immigrants to Mexico if they entered the United States from there, regardless of their nationality.

The immigration guidelines are the latest point of tension between neighbors that have also been at odds over Trump’s vow to build a wall on the border and his attempts to browbeat Mexico into giving concessions on trade.

Videgaray and President Enrique Pena Nieto have been criticized at home for being too willing to engage with Trump, who has repeatedly cranked up tension with the country ahead of key meetings.

Both sides on Thursday pledged further dialogue on migration, trade and security issues facing both nations. Kelly and Tillerson were much more measured in their words than either the Mexicans or Trump, who on Thursday said a military operation was being carried out to clear “bad dudes” from the United States.

Kelly said there would be “no use of military force in immigration operations,” and “no, repeat, no” mass deportations.

None of the officials made direct references to the deportation of immigrants from third countries to Mexico, or to paying for the border wall planned by Trump, a red-flag issue for Mexico.

 

(Reuters)

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