Más Información

Bienes de Rubén Rocha y acusados, en la mira de EU; inmuebles o ganancias económicas están sujetas a decomiso, dice

Marina erradica nueve plantíos de marihuana en cerro de Baja California; están ligados a una red criminal de San Quintín

PAN exige alerta migratoria para Rocha Moya y el alcalde de Culiacán; buscan evitar que se "fuguen del país"

Ella es Columba López, la primera mujer al frente de la Sader; asume el cargo con "amor a la patria, la tierra y el campo", dice

Delgado respalda a Ariadna Montiel rumbo a dirigencia de Morena; "su liderazgo nos conducirá a una jornada histórica en el 2027"
There are signs the U.S. government is taking a more flexible view of how to pay for its planned border wall with Mexico, and new meetings to craft future bilateral relations could take place soon, a top Mexican official said on Monday.
Those ties were shaken last week when a planned summit between U.S. President Donald Trump and Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto was canceled after the American said it was better to forgo it if Mexico was unwilling to pay for the wall.
Trump wants a wall on the U.S. southern border to keep out illegal immigrants and says Mexico will pay for it. Mexico has flatly refused, making the issue a point of national pride.
Peña Nieto and Trump spoke by telephone to calm tensions on Friday, and Mexican Foreign Minister Luis Videgaray said the two administrations were in close contact and would talk this week.
"Dialogue has not broken off," he said. "It's an extraordinarily important relationship for Mexico."
While no date has been set for a new Peña Nieto-Trump summit, meetings between government officials are possible in the next few days, said Videgaray, who expressed confidence that the White House was modifying its view on payment of the wall.
White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus said on Sunday that payment for the wall was still under discussion, mentioning the possibility of a border tax and other fiscal measures.
"It could be on drug cartels," Priebus added on CBS' "Face the Nation." "And it could be on people that are coming here illegally and paying fines. Or it could be all of the above."
While cautioning he had no details of what those plans could involve, Videgaray was heartened by the comments.
"I think it's a welcome sign, at least I interpret it that way, that we're seeing the rhetoric is changing," he said.
The minister said "a very sizeable part" of the business done by drug gangs was in the United States.
Trump has threatened to ditch the North American Free Trade Agreement binding Mexico, the United States and Canada, and Mexico's government wants to defend its access to the U.S. market by bringing migration and security into discussions.
After Trump's executive order to temporarily halt entry of citizens from seven mostly Muslim countries, Videgaray said it would not spark change in Mexico's migration policies.
"Mexico is not closing its doors to anyone," he said.
Noticias según tus intereses
[Publicidad]
[Publicidad]









