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Mexico says tackling migration, does not want to be in US election debate

MEXICO CITY: Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador on Wednesday (Oct 12) said his government was working to keep a lid on undocumented immigration ahead of US elections so that his country is not drawn into the political crossfire.

Speaking after Mexican authorities announced they had registered nearly 6,000 undocumented migrants in the country on Friday and Saturday, Lopez Obrador said his government wanted to ensure there was not "an influx of migrants in these days."

Lopez Obrador said the country's immigration policies were not changing, but stressed that it was important for Mexico not to be swept up in the US electoral rhetoric.

"We don't want to see the migration issue and Mexico to be part of the debate in United States," he told a regular news conference, noting that in the run-up to elections there was "always the temptation" to use migration for political ends.

Former US President Donald Trump, a Republican, made illegal immigration a focal point of his 2015-16 election campaign, causing outrage in his country's southern neighbour by describing Mexican migrants as rapists and drug runners.

In recent weeks, Republican state officials have bused thousands of Latin American migrants to largely Democratic cities elsewhere in the country, fuelling tensions over the issue and accusations that migrants are being used as political props.

In his remarks, Lopez Obrador pointed to legislative and governor elections scheduled for Nov 8, including Texas Governor Greg Abbott's re-election race.

Abbott, a critic of US border policy, has bused migrants to cities like Washington, DC, Chicago, and New York City, where the mayor this week declared a state of emergency to address the new arrivals' strain on city resources.

Source: Reuters/ec

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