Sunday, December 21, 2025

Right to asylum is ‘sacred’ and an integral part of foreign policy: AMLO

The right to asylum is “sacred,” President López Obrador said today as his government moves to implement stronger measures to reduce migration flows to the northern border.

Speaking at his morning press conference, the president said that previous federal governments – even “conservative, retrograde” ones – always respected that right, declaring that “it’s already been planted within Mexico’s foreign policy.”

As part of a deal to stave off tariffs threatened by United States President Donald Trump, Mexico last week undertook to increase security measures to curb irregular migration, a commitment which includes the deployment of 6,000 National Guard troops to the southern border.

Even before that commitment, human rights and migrant advocacy groups warned that the government’s increasingly militarized approach to combating people’s transit through Mexico posed a threat to migrants’ rights.

But the president pledged today that migrants in Mexico will be both respected and protected.

“The right to asylum that we have to guarantee is a sacred right for all Mexicans and in these times in which we are attending to the migration issue, we are always going to treat migrants with respect and give them protection . . .” López Obrador said.

“I’ve said it [before] and I repeat it, in this situation we’re going through now, we’re going to be very respectful of the government of the United States, of President Donald Trump and more than anything of the American people, but at the same time we’re going to respect migrants’ human rights,” he added.

“How is that balance going to be maintained? Well, that has to do with the noble function of politics, sometimes it’s scorned [but] it’s possible to avoid confrontation, that’s why politics was invented, to avoid confrontation, to avoid war.”

In an unusually short press conference by the president’s standards, López Obrador said the government’s “complete” plan to curb migration will be presented tomorrow.

Source: Reforma (sp) 

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.

Reading the Earth: How Mexican scientists are using plants, insects and soil to find the disappeared

0
Mexico has a crisis of the disappeared — with at least 115,000 people still missing — and scientists are now using new methods to find them, from biological patterns to environmental signatures.
Workers install decorations and structures in the Zócalo for the Winter Lights Festival.

Mexico’s week in review: Energy expansion and economic gains

0
Between Trump's threats of war on Venezuela and congressional hair-pulling, Mexico secured water agreements, energy investments and a strengthening peso.
Government agents wave Mexican flags as a caravan of cars drives down a highway at night

With government support, 20,000 US-based Mexicans caravan home for the holidays

5
The program Mexico Te Abraza provided support to the returning migrants, seeing them safely along the route until they were re-united with their familes.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity