US never came through with $2 billion to stem migration: AMLO

The United States reneged on a pledge to invest US $2 billion in southeastern Mexico in what was to be a joint effort to reduce northward migration, President López Obrador said Friday.

The agreement was part of the Comprehensive Development Plan for Central America and Mexico which was designed to decrease illegal migration from that region to the United States by creating new economic opportunities through investment in infrastructure.

“The U.S. government did not come through on the offer that they were going to allocate investment to the south and southeast,” López Obrador told his morning press briefing. 

But his relationship with President Donald Trump remains good regardless, he said. “We haven’t had to endure a single act of “high-handedness” by the U.S. government, “nor will we allow it.”

Foreign Affairs Minister Marcelo Ebrard announced last year that an agreement had been reached with the Donald Trump administration that the United States would invest in Central America and southern Mexico.

Backed by the United Nations and the European Union, the plan was designed to curb immigration to the United States by improving the economies of impoverished Central American countries and the poorer states of Mexico, said Ebrard. 

Some of the funds promised by the U.S. have been delivered. Ebrard reported that the United States government began to transfer resources to Mexico last September in accordance with the agreement, including $126 million for micro-financing funds destined for small and medium-sized businesses, and two letters of intent were signed for infrastructure projects totaling $800 million in southern Mexico. Three other projects that are currently being negotiated are worth another $330 million.  

Improving conditions in impoverished regions of the country remains a goal of the current administration, and Mexico continues working to stem emigration and stimulate the economy by funding large infrastructure projects. One major undertaking is in the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, a project designed to help develop the region by providing social and economic opportunities for residents.

The president is hopeful that new jobs created along the corridor will boost the economy in both Veracruz and Oaxaca and thus deter citizens from migrating to the United States. 

Source: El Economista (sp), Associated Press (en)

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

A decline in inflation prompts Mexico’s central bank to cut its key interest rate

0
The central bank once again showed its willingness to cut its interest rate even as inflation remains above the 3% target, but this time it indicated that no more such cuts are likely this year.
Todd Blanche

US AG: More charges against Mexican politicians are coming

12
"We've already indicted multiple government officials out of Mexico ... And so that's something that will continue," acting U.S. Attorney General Todd Blanche said in a NewsNation interview on Wednesday.
A sea turtle digs into a sandy beach

Tamaulipas reports a strong nesting season for the world’s rarest sea turtle

2
Authorities in Tamaulipas have counted over 207,000 eggs across 2,307 nests for far this year — an encouraging early tally for the world's most endangered sea turtle.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity