Mexico increases consular protection for expats in United States
Miami: Mexico`s consulate in
Miami has inaugurated a new section to enhance protections for Mexicans in the
US as they face new challenges posed by the policies of President Donald Trump,
a media report said .
The establishment of such a
section in each of the 50 Mexican consulates in the US is part of President
Enrique Peña Nieto`s response to Trump`s negative stance toward the Aztec
nation, Consul-General Jose Antonio Zabalgoitia told Efe news on Friday.
At the Miami consulate, the
section will have a staff of four, three of them attorneys.
The new sections are needed
because the "current circumstances are different from those we had for
many years," Zabalgoitia said.
"It is necessary to
concentrate consular work and prioritise consular protection."
The diplomat said that while he
was yet to see any "alarming" changes in the situation of Mexicans in
South Florida, the consulate was trying to anticipate future needs and
"organise the work to be more efficient."
Since taking office on January
20, Trump has taken steps to fulfill his campaign promise to build a wall on
the US-Mexico border to prevent the entry of "bad hombres".
The new administration has also
adopted a more aggressive approach to enforcement of immigration laws, which is
a cause for concern among the country`s estimated 11 million undocumented
migrants.
More than 600,000 Mexicans live
in Florida, according to Zabalgoitia, who declined to estimate how many of them
are undocumented.
He did note, however, that more
than 70,000 Mexicans in Florida entered the US as seasonal agricultural workers
with H-2A visas, Efe news reported.
Acknowledging an increase in the
number of Mexicans deported from Florida, Zabalgoitia said he has seen no sign
of raids or mass detentions targeting people from his country.
So far, he said, the most visible
reaction to the Trump era has been a surge in expats with US-born children
coming to the consulate to register their offspring as Mexican citizens.
"Warlier, I signed two birth
registrations per week, while yesterday (Thursday) alone I signed 15," the
consul-general said.
Facing a greater threat of
deportation or, in some cases, mulling the idea of returning to Mexico on their
own initiative, expats are now anxious to ensure that their children also have
Mexican citizenship, Zabalgoitia said.
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