Mexico-US Relations: Border wall prototypes become unlikely attraction
Updated 19:52, 06-Jul-2018
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As Mexico prepares for a government transition, diplomatic efforts with its northern neighbor are on hold. But one innovative company in Tijuana, where the two countries meet, has turned the breakdown of international relations into an attraction, as CGTN's Alasdair Baverstock reports.
While Mexico has chosen its new leader, the future of its rocky relationship with the United States remains in doubt.
In a move that many saw as political provocation, President Donald Trump had eight border wall prototypes erected in the desert, facing Mexico.
Javier Reyna, a recent deportee from California, looks at the prototypes every day, since he now works as a security guard on the Mexican side.
JAVIER REYNA BORDER RESIDENT AND US DEPORTEE "It makes me very angry. I don't like them, they should be removed. I've been deported, my family's over there, and I'm here staring at that. I'd love to blow them up."
But the structures have turned into objects of fascination for the American side since they can't be seen from any public perch in the U.S.
It's a fascination that a Tijuana tour company has turned into a money-spinner.
Founded by Derek Chinn, Turista Libre Mexico now offers to take tourists to visit the prototypes.
DERRIK CHINN TURISTA LIBRE MEXICO TOURS "The tours started because as a resident of Tijuana now for eleven years, what was always fascinating to me was the proximity of the border, and the way that the border has shaped this local reality here. This concept you know, this human concept of lines in the dirt that separate realities, so to get folks into the city so they can learn more about the current state of the border and then also its history and where we're coming from."
Derek says in all he's taken more than ten thousand people to see the wall that separates the two countries.
DERRIK CHINN TURISTA LIBRE MEXICO TOURS "Everyone has a different reaction. I think most people that come on the tour with us, given that the majority are US citizens, I think the first thing they feel is shame, disgust, rage, anger, and some are even reduced to tears. But from what I'm seeing, I just see a huge waste of money. There's an old saying that good fences make good neighbors, but I think this is going a little too far."
Only a small fraction of the 25-billion dollars President Trump has requested for the border wall has been approved by the U.S. Congress - and right now that's being spent to fix existing portions.
Whether any of these prototypes will see large-scale production will depend on whether Trump can win that broader funding.
ALASDAIR BAVERSTOCK TIJUANA, MEXICO As Mexico's new administration prepares for government, the hope here is that these prototypes will stand as monuments to a low-point in the Mexican-American relationship, rather than a greater barrier between the two countries. Alasdair Baverstock, CGTN, at the U.S.-Mexico border.