Trump’s Asylum Agreement with Guatemala Is Ludicrous
The Trump administration announced on Friday that it had
signed a “safe third country agreement” with Guatemala that would “put human
smugglers out of business and provide safety for legitimate asylum seekers.”
According to the White House, the agreement would require
migrants from Honduras and El Salvador—two of the three countries in Central
America’s Northern Triangle—to apply for asylum protection in Guatemala rather
than at the U.S. border, if they pass through Guatemala on their way to the
U.S.
Guatemalans and unaccompanied minors are exempt from this
requirement, according to a copy of the agreement
posted online by the Guatemalan government.
The agreement was signed in the White House on Friday by
U.S. acting Homeland Security Secretary Kevin McAleenan and Guatemala’s Interior
Minister Enrique Degenhart.
“We’ve long been working with Guatemala and now we can do it
the right way. It’s going to be terrific for them and terrific for the United
States,” Trump said, reading awkwardly from a sheet of paper on his desk.
Referring to “smugglers” and human traffickers, Trump ad-libbed, “These are bad
people. These are very, very bad, sick, deranged people.”
The announcement capped months of frustrated negotiations
between the two governments over a so-called safe third country deal in an
attempt to curb migration from Northern Triangle countries to the U.S. That
includes a canceled
visit to Washington last week by Guatemalan President Jimmy Morales.
Earlier this week, Trump lashed out at Guatemalan officials
over the stalling talks. He threatened, via Twitter, to levy new tariffs,
including on remittances to Guatemala, a major source of income for that
country, and wrote that “Guatemala has not been good.”
In response to Friday’s signing, Morales wrote
on social media that Guatemala had managed to “avoid drastic sanctions”
designed to “heavily damage the economy,” including new tariffs on Guatemalan
exports and tighter immigration restrictions on its citizens.
But there are several problems with this hastily arranged
agreement, not the least of which is that it may not be legal according to
Guatemalan law. Also, while it says that the U.S. will send asylum-seekers who
have passed through Guatemala and have arrived at the U.S. border back to
Guatemala, the document lacks any specific details about how this will be
carried out and who will pay for it.