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Trump and Lopez Obrador declare US-Mexico agreement to avert tariffs

China Daily | Updated: 2019-06-10 09:39

Haitian migrants get off a raft after crossing the Suchiate river from Tecun Uman, Guatemala, to Ciudad Hidalgo, Mexico, as seen from Ciudad Hidalgo on Saturday. JOSE CABEZAS/REUTERS

TIJUANA, Mexico - US Presidents Donald Trump and Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador each declared the deal averting US tariffs on Mexico a win on Saturday, as markets breathed a sigh of relief - though rights groups condemned what they called a draconian crackdown on migration.

Lopez Obrador said the bottom line on the last-minute deal reached on Friday night was simple: "There will not be an economic or financial crisis in Mexico on Monday."

Economists had warned the pain of Trump's threatened tariffs - set to start at five percent Monday and rise incrementally to 25 percent by October - and Mexico's likely retaliatory measures would have been acute for both countries, with potentially global spillover.

Instead, the countries hammered out a deal in which Mexico agreed to bolster security on its southern border and expand its policy of taking back migrants, most of them from violence-riven Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador, as the United States processes their asylum claims.

Trump hailed it as a victory, after a week of terrifying his southern neighbor, whose economy depends heavily on exports to the US.

"Mexico will try very hard, and if they do that, this will be a very successful agreement for both the United States and Mexico!" he tweeted early Saturday.

Later, he added: "Everyone very excited about the new deal with Mexico!"

The relief was palpable in the Mexican border city of Tijuana, where Lopez Obrador led a rally attended by several thousand people to celebrate the deal and "the friendship of the people of Mexico and the United States."

However, Lopez Obrador - who said he had just spoken to Trump on the phone - also warned his US counterpart that it was not enough for Mexico to tighten its borders, saying Washington also needed to invest in economic development in Central America to stem the exodus from the region.

"The solution cannot be found in just closing borders or coercive measures. The only solution is to fight the lack of opportunity and poverty so that migration is optional," he said, speaking on a stage set up, with seeming symbolism, next to a McDonald's five blocks from the border.

Agence France-Presse

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