<p>Mexico: Mexico's president said on Wednesday she has not agreed to accept non-Mexican migrants seeking asylum in the United States, a day after her new US counterpart announced the return of a program to do so.</p><p>On Tuesday, the administration of new US President <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tags/donald-trump">Donald Trump </a>announced it would bring back its "Remain in Mexico" program, formerly known as the Migrant Protection Protocols, that forced non-Mexican asylum seekers to wait in Mexico until their often prolonged cases in the United States were resolved.</p><p>Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum told reporters that such a move would require the country receiving the asylum-seekers to agree, and that Mexico had not done so.</p>.Mexico builds temporary shelters to prepare for mass deportations from US.<p>She said her government was offering humanitarian assistance to deported migrants of other nationalities along with "mechanisms to be repatriated" if they voluntarily want to return to their home countries.</p><p>On Monday, Trump returned to the White House vowing to press ahead with aggressive immigration and border security measures, including the declaration of a national emergency at the southern border despite a sharp reduction in crossings over the past year.</p><p>The MPP program was initially launched in 2019 during Trump's previous term as president in a bid to deter what officials then described as fraudulent asylum claims.</p><p>Human rights advocates pushed back against the policy, arguing that it endangered migrants, including families with young children, by forcing them to live in border encampments vulnerable to organized crime.</p><p>In 2021, former President Joe Biden ended the program, citing precarious and dangerous conditions on the Mexican side of the border.</p><p>Also on Wednesday, Sheinbaum noted that her Foreign Minister Juan Ramon de la Fuente and newly-confirmed US Secretary of State Marco Rubio had a "very cordial" phone call a day earlier in which they discussed migration and security matters.</p>
<p>Mexico: Mexico's president said on Wednesday she has not agreed to accept non-Mexican migrants seeking asylum in the United States, a day after her new US counterpart announced the return of a program to do so.</p><p>On Tuesday, the administration of new US President <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tags/donald-trump">Donald Trump </a>announced it would bring back its "Remain in Mexico" program, formerly known as the Migrant Protection Protocols, that forced non-Mexican asylum seekers to wait in Mexico until their often prolonged cases in the United States were resolved.</p><p>Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum told reporters that such a move would require the country receiving the asylum-seekers to agree, and that Mexico had not done so.</p>.Mexico builds temporary shelters to prepare for mass deportations from US.<p>She said her government was offering humanitarian assistance to deported migrants of other nationalities along with "mechanisms to be repatriated" if they voluntarily want to return to their home countries.</p><p>On Monday, Trump returned to the White House vowing to press ahead with aggressive immigration and border security measures, including the declaration of a national emergency at the southern border despite a sharp reduction in crossings over the past year.</p><p>The MPP program was initially launched in 2019 during Trump's previous term as president in a bid to deter what officials then described as fraudulent asylum claims.</p><p>Human rights advocates pushed back against the policy, arguing that it endangered migrants, including families with young children, by forcing them to live in border encampments vulnerable to organized crime.</p><p>In 2021, former President Joe Biden ended the program, citing precarious and dangerous conditions on the Mexican side of the border.</p><p>Also on Wednesday, Sheinbaum noted that her Foreign Minister Juan Ramon de la Fuente and newly-confirmed US Secretary of State Marco Rubio had a "very cordial" phone call a day earlier in which they discussed migration and security matters.</p>