Tuesday, November 4, 2025

Sending 715 migrants home will cost 56 million pesos

Repatriating some of the undocumented migrants detained in Mexico won’t come cheap.

National Immigration Institute (INM) chief Francisco Garduño said immigration authorities are holding 715 immigrants from outside the Americas, and that deporting them will cost the Mexican government 56 million pesos (US $2.9 million).

“Right now, we have 715 migrants we have to send to Asia, Europe and Africa,” he said.

Speaking to reporters at the National Palace on Monday, Garduño said there are 5,000 migrants being held in 66 facilities around the country, and that feeding each one costs about 120 pesos a day.

What do they eat? The food to which they are accustomed, Garduño said.

“. . . based on a human rights recommendation, you can’t give the same food to Chinese nationals as to people from India. You have to give different food to different nationalities based on what they are used to,” he said. “We’re making an effort with the food.”

Garduño admitted that conditions in some migrant detention centers are “deplorable” because of overcrowding and deterioration, and need to be improved. He noted that improvement projects have already started at two of the centers with the worst conditions: Siglo XXI in Tapachula, Chiapas, and the center in Acayucan, Veracruz.

Attention is also being provided to children. “We want minors to be able to have a formal education . . .” he said.

Foreign Secretary Marcelo Ebrard announced that 60 million pesos from the Infrastructure Fund for the Countries of Mesoamerica and the Caribbean, also known as the Yucatán Fund, will be used to improve conditions in detention centers in Mexico.

The fund is a financial cooperation instrument set up by the Mexican government in 2012 to promote infrastructure development projects in Central America, the Caribbean and Mexico.

Garduño also admitted that there continues to be corruption in the INM, despite efforts by the federal government to control it. Since President López Obrador took office, the governmenthas sanctioned 21 INM officials for acts of corruption against migrants, and three officials face criminal charges for extortion of migrants.

Source: El Financiero (sp), El Economista (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
A US soldier in camo surveils a desert valley in New Mexico

Report: Trump administration is planning a manned mission to fight cartels in Mexico

0
The US has detailed plans " to send American troops and intelligence officers into Mexico to target drug cartels," NBC reported this week.
protest Morelia

Mayor’s murder triggers protests in Michoacán and a US offer of ‘security cooperation’ against organized crime

8
Shock turned to anger over the weekend as large groups of protesters reacted to the Uruapan mayor's murder by demanding an end to the violence that has long wracked Michoacán.
man kneeling with candles

At least 23 dead after an explosion and fire in an Hermosillo discount store

0
The tragedy apparently occurred after power outages were followed by electrical surges that caused the explosion and fire, with toxic fumes thought to be a cause of deaths.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity