Mexico urges migrants in US to ‘stay calm’

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Days after Donald Trump vowed to deport undocumented migrants with criminal records, Mexico’s government told its citizens in the United States on Wednesday to “stay calm” and launched a hotline to report “incidents.”

In the wake of Trump’s presidential election last week, the foreign ministry unveiled 11 actions that it will undertake through its embassy and 50 consulates in the United States so Mexicans can “avoid being victims of abuses and fraud.”

“Fellow citizens, these are uncertain times. Stay calm. Don’t fall into provocations and don’t let yourself be fooled,” Foreign Minister Claudia Ruiz Massieu said in a video message posted on Twitter.

The program, she said, aims to give information about the “possible immigration actions” that could take place “from February.”

While Ruiz Massieu did not mention US President-elect Trump, the Republican billionaire will take office on January 20 following his surprise victory in the November 8 election.

Trump said in an interview with CBS television’s “60 Minutes” program broadcast Sunday that as many as three million undocumented immigrants with criminal records would be deported or incarcerated.

The United States has an estimated 11-12 million undocumented migrants, mostly of Mexican origin.

Trump infuriated Mexicans calling migrants from their country “rapists” and drug runners when he launched his campaign last year, vowing to build a border wall to keep them out.

The Mexican foreign ministry said it would activate a free 1-800 hotline, open 24 hours per day, “to deal with any doubts about immigration measures or report incidents.”

The ministry said its program includes urging Mexicans “to avoid any situation of conflict and not commit actions that can lead to administrative or criminal sanctions.”

The government is also deploying more mobile “consulates on wheels” and increasing appointments for passports.

Mexico’s ambassador to the United States, Carlos Manuel Sada, told reporters in Mexico City that the government has immigration lawyers in the neighbouring country who can help.

“We will be closer to you than ever to keep you informed, accompany you and defend you,” Ruiz Massieu said.

“You are not alone, we are with you,” she said.

President Enrique Pena Nieto plans to meet with Trump, possibly before the president-elect’s inauguration in January.

Pena Nieto’s spokesman, Eduardo Sanchez, said the government wants to discuss Trump’s deportation plan with the incoming administration.

Enrique Morones, director of the California-based immigrant rights group Border Angels, told a foreign media agency that the Mexican government’s measures “won’t be enough, though they help.”

Immigrants could be more vulnerable to fraud schemes from fake immigration lawyers who promise to help them legalise their situations for $8,000, he said.

Morones said it was important for Mexico’s government to act because “hate incidents have increased since the Trump campaign began.”