AP
By Luis Alonso Lugo, Katharine Corcoran
January 6, 2015
President
Barack Obama is hosting Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto at the
White House Tuesday, looking to his southern neighbor for help
implementing the president's
changing policies on immigration and Cuba.
Obama
wants Pena Nieto to join him in pressuring Cuba to make democratic
reforms now that the White House is moving to re-establish diplomatic
and commercial ties. The
U.S.-Cuba estrangement had been a point of friction with Latin American
countries, including Mexico, that had normal ties with the communist
island nation.
Pena
Nieto's government also could help spread the word of qualifications
for Obama's plan to defer some 4 million deportations for immigrants in
the U.S. illegally. Two-thirds
of those who are eligible are from Mexico.
Both
actions from Obama in recent weeks drew praise from Pena Nieto, who may
be hoping his visit to the White House can help give him a boost after a
2014 marked by scandal,
violence and corruption. That includes soldiers killing 22 civilians in
a questionable "shootout" and revelations that Pena Nieto and his
treasury secretary live in luxury homes built and financed by a favorite
government contractor.
Perhaps
most notably, tens of thousands of protesters have taken to the streets
to protest the Sept. 26 abduction and presumed murder of 43 college
students, allegedly
at the hands of local officials and police in league with a drug
cartel. Pena Nieto told the country it was time to "move beyond" the
case just weeks after their abduction, and he took a month to meet with
their families.
Human
Rights Watch wrote a letter to Obama Monday urging him to press Pena
Nieto to take the case and "a broader pattern of abuse and impunity" in
Mexico more seriously.
Obama administration officials responded that Obama plans to raise the
issue of strengthening Mexico's law enforcement and judicial
institutions during the visit, which includes an Oval Office meeting
followed by a working lunch.
Sergio
Alcocer, Mexican undersecretary for North America affairs, said he
didn't expect the student abduction specifically to come up between the
two presidents. Alcocer
pointed out that the United States has had its own scandal and protests
over the shooting of unarmed Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri.
"We
have cases of violence in different parts of the world," Alcocer said.
"Within the United States we know there has been this kind of violence
in the area of Missouri,
to mention just one case."
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