Mexico rejects 'unilateral' US migration moves

24 Feb, 2017

Mexico vowed not to let the United States impose migration reforms on it as its leaders prepared Thursday to host US officials who are cracking down on illegal immigrants. Foreign Minister Luis Videgaray sharpened the tone as he prepared for talks following a diplomatic row over president Donald Trump's hard line on trade and immigration.
Trump has outraged Mexico by vowing to build a wall along the border to keep out migrants from Latin America, whom he branded rapists and criminals during his presidential campaign. His government has issued new orders to begin arresting and deporting illegal immigrants, many of them Mexicans. "The Mexican government and people do not have to accept measures that one government wants to impose unilaterally on another," Videgaray said late Wednesday.
"We are not going to accept that because we do not have to do it and it is not in Mexico's interests." He said Mexico would use "all legally possible means" to defend Mexicans living abroad, including potentially appealing to the United Nations. President Mexican Enrique Pena Nieto and Videgaray were scheduled to meet with US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and Homeland Security chief John Kelly on Thursday.
US officials said the talks will focus on how to curb cross-border migration and drug-trafficking and to affirm their bilateral ties. Trump's stance has strained previously good US-Mexican relations, said Maureen Meyer, an expert at the Washington Office on Latin America, a US human rights advocacy organization.

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