https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-48604023



US President Donald Trump has inadvertently revealed some details of his 
immigration deal with Mexico.

He refused to discuss the plans with reporters, saying they were "secret".

But he said this while waving around a sheet of paper that had the specifics of 
the deal written on it - which was then photographed by news media.

President Trump made tightening the border with Mexico a major campaign pledge 
and the agreement averted his threat to impose tariffs on Mexico.

The document suggested that Mexico had agreed to a deadline by which it had to 
show its efforts at halting the movement of migrants had worked.

If the US determined that the measures had "not sufficiently achieved results 
in addressing the flow of migrants", Mexico would then take stronger legal 
action.×


What has Mexico said about the deal?

Mexican Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard confirmed that Mexico had 45 days to 
show it was able to stem the flow of US-bound migrants by strengthening its 
southern border.

It is now deploying 6,000 National Guard personnel to the border with Guatemala.
"You go to the south and the first thing you ask yourself is: 'Right, where's 
the border?' There's nothing," he said on Tuesday. "The idea is to make the 
south like the north as far as possible."
[end of quote]

Media captionA look at the steps Mexico is taking to deal with migrants
If this plan failed, the foreign minister said, Mexico had agreed to be 
designated a safe third country - something that has been demanded by the US 
before, but has long been rejected by Mexico.

If Mexico were to be a safe third country, migrants' asylum applications would 
be processed there rather than in the US.

Mr Ebrard earlier said the US had been insistent on this measure, and it had 
wanted this to be implemented straight away.
   
   - Mexico 'has 45 days to curb migrant flow to US'
   - Is there a crisis on the US-Mexico border?


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Is there a crisis on the US-Mexico border?

President Trump says a "crisis" at the border has forced his hand - but what do 
the numbers tell us?
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   - Trump's 'border wall' in seven charts


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Trump's border wall - in seven charts

The number of people crossing into the US from Mexico is the highest in a 
decade. So what is going on at the bor...
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But he said: "We told them - I think it was the most important achievement of 
the negotiations - 'let's set a time period to see if what Mexico is proposing 
will work, and if not, we'll sit down and see what additional measures [are 
needed]'."

"They wanted something else totally different to be signed. But that is what 
there is here. There is no other thing."
Image copyrightREUTERSImage captionMigrants from Honduras attempting to cross 
the Rio Bravo river in order to request asylum in El Paso, Texas
If Mexico fails to curb migration in 45 days, other countries will be drawn 
into the matter.

Discussions would take place with Brazil, Panama and Guatemala - the countries 
currently used by migrants as transit points - to see if they could share the 
burden of processing asylum claims.

Mr Ebrard also said US negotiators had wanted Mexico to commit to "zero 
migrants" crossing its territory, but that was "mission impossible".



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