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US lawmakers reach deal on US-Mexico border wall

Bill to provide $1.375 bn for wall construction, far less than $5.7 bn sought by Trump.

Washington: Democrats and Republicans have struck a deal in principle to fund the US government and avert another crippling government shutdown while denying President Donald Trump much of the $5.7 billion he demanded to build a controversial wall along the US-Mexico border.

The announcement by lawmakers on Monday night came days ahead of a possible government shutdown from Friday in the absence of such an agreement.

Senate and House negotiators from both parties, who held a closed-door meeting in Washington, did not comment on the details of the deal, saying the staff is still working on last-minute logistics.

Sharp differences between Democrats and President Trump over border security and building a wall along the US-Mexico border resulted in a record partial government shutdown for more than 30 days. Building a wall along the US-Mexico border is a campaign promise of the 72-year-old Republican President.

“We've had a good evening. We've reached an agreement in principle between us on the Homeland Security and the other six bills,” Senator Richard Shelby told reporters on Monday night. As a result, the House and the Senate are likely to pass a new resolution before the February 15 deadline.

According to reports, the bill would provide $1.375 billion for wall construction, far less than $5.7 billion congressional funding Trump has demanded to build the wall.

According to Trump, illegal immigrants pose a national security risk to the US and can only be stopped by the construction of a border wall.

If accepted, the deal would end a standoff in which Trump has threatened to cut budgets from swaths of government this Friday.

The tentative agreement, according to the Hill newspaper, also specifically prohibits the use of a concrete wall. But, senior Congressional aides separately noted that it will fund new barriers for approximately 88kms along the US-Mexico border in the Rio Grande Valley sector.

The agreement came as Trump went to the southern border in El Paso, Texas to address a rally with his supporters on the wall. The White House did not comment on the agreement and Trump said at the rally, “We probably have some good news but who knows.”

Addressing thousands of his supportes, many wearing his red “Make America Great Again” campaign hats, Trump said: “We need the wall and it has to be built and we want to build it fast.”

Earlier in the day, Trump said another government shutdown depends on the Democrats. “We've actually started a big, big portion of wall today in a very important location.

And it's going to go up pretty quickly over the next nine months. That whole area will be finished. It's fully funded,” he said at a White House event.

( Source : PTI )
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