Friday, November 22, 2024

Mexico to offer temporary work visas to Central American migrants

Mexico will launch a program this week offering Central American migrants temporary visas to work on public infrastructure projects, President Andrés Manuel López Obrador said on Monday.

Ironworkers, tilers, engineers and tradesmen are needed in the construction of his government’s flagship projects, the president said at his weekly news conference. “We need a workforce for these projects, especially … skilled labor.”

The visas will be granted for one year.

The one-year visas will allow migrants to work on the construction of President López Obrador’s flagship projects, including the Maya Train. (Elizabeth Ruiz/Cuartoscuro)

Although he did not share details as to how many visas would be issued or for which of his government’s projects, he did stress that these jobs will not take away job opportunities for Mexicans. Migrants, he added, intend to stay only temporarily in the country. 

“Their goal is to get to the United States, not to stay in Mexico,” he said. 

López Obrador’s projects currently underway include the Maya Train, a tourist train linking destinations around the Yucatan Peninsula; the interoceanic corridor, a freight rail line crossing the Isthmus of Tehuantepec to create a trade route between Mexico’s Pacific and Gulf coasts; and the Dos Bocas refinery in the southern state of Tabasco.

To attract migrant workers, López Obrador explained that his government will launch a campaign in Central America to spread the word that salaries in Mexico are increasing.

President López Obrador promised that these temporary visitors wouldn’t take away jobs from Mexicans. “Their goal is to get to the United States, not to stay in Mexico,” he told reporters. (lopezobrador.org.mx)

During his Monday morning conference, he revealed that the United States president Joe Biden had sent a letter to his government that committed to increase its investment in Central America and the Caribbean. López Obrador has long pushed for investment in the region to create employment opportunities and stem migration.   

While Biden didn’t share details of the investment, he promised to personally verify López Obrador’s visa project alongside Vice President Kamala Harris.

Every year, thousands of people flee poverty and violence in Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador and Nicaragua to head to the U.S. through Mexico.

According to the United States’ Migration Policy Institute, between October 2019 and March 2023, nationals of these four countries accounted for almost one-third of all 5.8 million migrant encounters at the Mexican-U.S. border. 

Migrants at the US-Mexico border in Tijuana on May 11.
The expiration of the pandemic-era Title 42 policy has gone smoothly according to the U.S. and Mexican governments. (Omar Martínez/Cuartoscuro)

López Obrador also addressed the expiration of the U.S. migration policy Title 42 last week, which allowed U.S. authorities to immediately expel undocumented migrants during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Sharing official numbers from the United States Customs and Border Protection, López Obrador said that as opposed to the “scaremongering propaganda that was going on in the United States” a few weeks ago, detentions in the border have declined from 200,000 in April to some 150,000 in May — although May hasn’t ended yet. 

“Fortunately, this [situation] was resolved,” he assured reporters.  

With reports from Reuters, Infobae and La Jornada

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum stands at a podium during her morning press conference in front of a Mexican flag

Sheinbaum responds to Canada’s free trade doubts: Friday’s mañanera recapped

0
The president also refuted the idea that Mexico is a transshipment hub for Chinese goods, a frequent Trump claim.
CJNG drug lord Cristian "El Guacho" Gutiérrez Ochoa poses for a photo holding a rooster

CJNG leader ‘El Guacho’ arrested in California after faking his own death

0
As prosecutors closed in on the cartel, one leader faked his death and fled to live in the U.S. under a new identity.
A group of migrants gather in the courtyard of a compound in Oaxaca, shortly after their rescue by government officials

174 migrants, including 41 minors, rescued in Oaxaca

0
Officials reported that some of those rescued were being held against their will.