Guatemala election winner sets sights on changing Trump migrant deal

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Giammattei celebrates with his children after winning the presidential election, at their campaign headquarters in Guatemala City. — Reuters photo

GUATEMALA CITY: Guatemalan conservative Alejandro Giammattei secured a crushing victory in a presidential election, and promised to seek better terms for his country from an unpopular migration deal agreed with Washington under duress last month.

With preliminary results from over 99 per cent of polling stations counted, the electoral tribunal declared Giammattei the winner with over 58 per cent of the vote, ahead of his center-left rival, former first lady Sandra Torres on 42 per cent.

Speaking a few hours before being declared the winner, Giammattei said he wanted to see what could be done to improve the deal that outgoing President Jimmy Morales agreed to stem US-bound migration from Central America.

Giammattei will not take office until January, by which time Guatemala may be under severe pressure from the deal that effectively turns the country into a buffer zone, by forcing migrants to seek refuge there rather than in the United States.

“I hope that during this transition the doors will open to get more information so we can see what, from a diplomatic point of view, we can do to remove from this deal the things that are not right for us, or how we can come to an agreement with the United States,” Giammattei, 63, told Reuters in an interview.

Threatened with economic sanctions if he said no, Morales reached an accord in late July to make Guatemala – despite endemic poverty and violence that have led hundreds of thousands of its people to migrate north – a so-called safe third country for migrants.

“It’s not right for the country. If we don’t have the capacity to look after our own people, imagine what it will be like for foreigners,” Giammattei said of the deal.

The agreement is also highly unpopular in Guatemala. A poll published this month by Guatemalan newspaper Prensa Libre showed more than eight out of 10 rejected the idea of the country accepting foreign migrants seeking asylum.

It is unclear how much Giammattei will be able to do to change the deal, which would require Hondurans and Salvadorans to apply for asylum in Guatemala rather than the United States. It also foresees granting US visas to some Guatemalan workers. — Reuters