Mexico s President announced his plan to propose to U.S. President Joe Biden an extension of one of his welfare programs to Central America to curb migration and make migrants stay in their homeland countries.
President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador issued the statement on Sunday as the U.S. continues to experience a surge of migrants from Mexico and Central America crossing the border illegally.
It can be recalled that the Biden administration recently struck a deal with Mexico, Honduras, and Guatemala to control the surge of migrants at the U.S.-Mexico border.
The three countries have placed more troops on their borders to stop and discourage Central American migrants from fleeing their home countries to seek asylum in the United States.
The Biden administration has struck a deal with Mexico, Honduras, and Guatemala to control the surge of migrants on the U.S.-Mexico border.
According to The Guardian, the agreement between the United States and the three countries will temporarily put more troops on their own border to halt migrants from reaching the southern border.
White Press Secretary Jen Psaki announced the deal between the U.S., Mexico, Honduras, and Guatemala during her daily briefing with reporters.
President Joe Biden s reversal of the Trump administration s border policies has flooded the U.S. borders with Central American and Mexican illegal migrants, New York Post reported.
After allegedly drawing their guns on a uniformed Army officer during a traffic stop and spraying him with a substance last December, two Virginia police officers have been sued. One of them has since been terminated.
Based on the lawsuit filed April 2, on December 4, 2020, Windsor police officers Joe Gutierrez and Daniel Crocker pulled over U. S. Army 2nd Lt. Caron Nazario, who is Black and Latino. He was still wearing his uniform when he was stopped by the officers.
Black-Latino Officer Files Lawsuit
According to ABC News, the suit filed in the U.S. District Court for Eastern Virginia in Norfolk claims that the officers violated the constitutional rights of Nazario.