Pompeo later traveled to El Salvador to meet with President Nayib Bukele, with the two sides pledging to work together on the issue of immigration.
The top US diplomat’s meeting in Mexico confirmed that relations between Washington and Mexico City had calmed considerably since early June, when President Donald Trump had threatened stiff new trade tariffs against the United States’ southern neighbor unless it acted forcefully to slow the migrant flow.
Pompeo met Sunday in Mexico City with Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard on a regional trip that began in Argentina and Ecuador.
“Secretary Pompeo thanked Foreign Minister Ebrard for Mexico’s increased immigration enforcement efforts,” the State Department said.
Speaking in El Salvador, Pompeo said that Mexico has “made real progress” on migration.
“The numbers are good… There are fewer apprehensions taking place today along our southern border, but we’ve got a long way to go yet — there’s still much more work to do,” he told a news conference in San Salvador.
The meeting between Ebrard and Pompeo, while focused primarily on migration, also included talks on recovering the wealth of notorious drug trafficker Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman — sentenced to life imprisonment in the US — as well as the status of the not-yet-ratified North American trade agreement, the Mexican Foreign Ministry said.
The Mexican statement said Pompeo had recognized “significant advances” by Mexico on slowing migration since a high-stakes June 7 meeting in Washington held amid a growing migration crisis.
That accord — reached under the shadow of Trump’s trade threats — stipulated that failure by Mexico to rein in cross-border migration within 45 days could result in the need to negotiate a tougher arrangement.
Visit to El Salvador
But the Mexican statement said that “in light of these advances,” Ebrard “does not consider it necessary to initiate” such negotiations.
At the meeting Sunday, Ebrard said Mexico’s strategy to “ensure orderly, safe and regular migrant flows will continue for the next 45 days,” the statement said.
The Mexican government in June deployed thousands of soldiers and police officers, both near the southern border with Guatemala and the US border in the north, to slow the migrant flow, which has come principally from impoverished and crime-ridden Central American countries.
Official Mexican figures say the number of migrants coming into Mexico from those countries fell from 144,000 in May to 100,000 in June.
Pompeo and Ebrard also discussed the fortune amassed by drug kingpin Guzman.
The US judge who sentenced him to life in prison last week ordered Guzman to forfeit $12.6 billion, but Mexico wants the money to stay in their country.
The two diplomats discussed creating a binational group to study the matter.
A strategic collaboration between Huawei Pakistan and the Ministry of Planning, Development & Special Initiatives…
Pakistan's space programme achieved a historic milestone on Friday as the country's first-ever lunar orbiter…
Former prime minister and Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) founder Imran Khan on Friday urged the courts…
The Islamabad High Court (IHC) rejected on Friday a plea by the Intelligence Bureau (IB)…
In a significant development, the appointments of new governors for Punjab, Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, and Balochistan have…
An explosion in the Chamrok area of Balochistan's Khuzdar district claimed the lives of at…
Leave a Comment