Home USA President Trump Says Guatemala is Signing Deal To Restrict Asylum Cases

President Trump Says Guatemala is Signing Deal To Restrict Asylum Cases

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Face of Nation : The signed an agreement with on Friday that will restrict asylum applications to the US from Central America.

The so-called “safe third country” agreement would require migrants, including Salvadorans and Hondurans, who cross into on their way to the U.S. to apply for protections in instead of at the US border.

It could potentially ease the crush of overwhelming the system, although many questions remain about how the agreement will be executed. President Donald Trump heralded the concession as a win as he struggles to live up to his campaign promises on immigration.

“This is a very big day,” he said. “We have long been working with Guatemala and now we can do it the right way.” He claimed, “This landmark agreement will put the coyotes and smugglers out of business.”

The announcement comes after a court in California blocked Trump’s most restrictive asylum effort to date, one that would effectively end protections at the southern border. The two countries had been negotiating such an agreement for months, and Trump threatened Wednesday to place tariffs or other consequences on Guatemala if it didn’t reach a deal.

“We’ll either do tariffs or we’ll do something. We’re looking at something very severe with respect to Guatemala,” Trump had said. On Friday, Trump praised the Guatemalan government, saying now it has “a friend in the United States, instead of an enemy in the United States.”

Trump added Friday that the agreement would protect “the rights of those with legitimate claims,” end “abuse” of the asylum system and curtail the crisis on the US southern border. He said that as part of the agreement, the US would increase access to the H-2A visa program for temporary agricultural workers from Guatemala.

It’s not clear how the agreement will take effect. Guatemala’s Constitutional Court has granted three injunctions preventing its government from entering into a deal without approval of the country’s congress.

Guatemalan President Jimmy Morales said via social media that the agreement allows the country to avoid “drastic sanctions … many of them designed to strongly punish our economy, such as taxes on remittances that our brothers send daily, as well as the imposition of tariffs on our export goods and migratory restrictions.” Earlier Friday, Morales questioned the concept of a “safe third country.” “Where does that term exist?” he asked reporters.

“It does not exist, it is a colloquial term. No agreement exists that is called ‘safe third country.'”Guatemala’s government put out a six-paragraph, Spanish-language statement Friday on Twitter. It does not call the agreement “safe third country” but “Cooperation Agreement for the Assessment of Protection Requests.”

Guatemala also lacks resources to adequately house, educate or provide opportunity to potential asylum seekers, observers say. In Guatemala City, social and student organizations spoke out against the agreement in front of the Constitutional Court, on the grounds that the country is mired in poverty and unemployment and has no capacity to serve  They called for a protest rally Saturday.