Troops Reducing Border Crossings

Discussion in 'Politics' started by Motion, Jun 15, 2006.

  1. Motion

    Motion Senior Member

    Messages:
    2,258
    Likes Received:
    116
    Troops reducing illegal border crossings


    By OLGA R. RODRIGUEZ, Associated Press Writer
    Mon Jun 12, 8:07 PM ET


    SAN LUIS RIO COLORADO, Mexico - The arrival of U.S. National Guard troops in Arizona has scared off illegal Mexican migrants along the border, significantly reducing crossings, according to U.S. and Mexican officials.


    U.S. authorities said Monday that detentions along the U.S.-Mexico border decreased by 21 percent, to 26,994, in the first 10 days of June, compared with 34,077 for the same period a year ago.

    Along the Arizona border, once the busiest crossing spot, detentions have dropped 23 percent, according to the U.S. Border Patrol.

    Detentions dropped 31 percent, to 8,308 from 11,977, along the Texas and New Mexico border.

    The desert region's blistering June temperatures typically drive down the number of migrants, but not so drastically, said Mario Martinez, a spokesman with the U.S. Border Patrol in Washington.

    The 55 Utah soldiers who arrived June 3 are the first of some 6,000 troops to be dispatched along the border as part of President Bush's plan to stem illegal immigration to the United States.

    The soldiers aren't allowed to detain migrants and have been limited to projects like extending border fences and repairing roads, but the military's presence is keeping would-be crossers away from the area, migrant rights activists said.

    Francisco Loureiro, who runs a migrant shelter in Nogales, Mexico, across the border from Arizona, said migrants are afraid of the U.S. troops after hearing reports of abuse in Iraq.

    "Some migrants have told me they heard about the troops on television and, because the U.S. Army doesn't have a very good reputation, they prefer not to cross," Loureiro said. Others have been discouraged by smugglers' fees that have nearly doubled to more than $3,000.

    Jorge Vazquez, coordinator for Mexico's Grupo Beta migrant aid agency in San Luis Rio Colorado, across from San Luis, Ariz., said that before the troops arrived, his agents encountered at least two dozens migrants daily, most waiting for nightfall to begin their trek through the sandy desert.

    "There have been days ... when we've found only three migrants," Vazquez said.

    Some migrants may be moving to the California-Mexico border, the only stretch of border that saw a spike in detentions, which were up 7 percent to 5,965 in the first 10 days of June.

    But it was too early to tell if the deployment would have a permanent effect on migrant routes and crossings of the 2,000-mile border.

    Wearing Army fatigues and hard hats, the soldiers have worked on projects such as installing vehicle barriers to help prevent smugglers from driving cars full of migrants or drugs across the border.

    Arizona Gov. Janet Napolitano has said 2,500 troops will be stationed in the four U.S. border states — Arizona, California, New Mexico and Texas — by the end of the month.

    The deployment plan has been criticized in Mexico as heavy-handed, and the Mexican government has said it will watch to ensure National Guard troops aren't detaining migrants.

    Only the most persistent migrants remained in San Luis Rio Colorado, which sits across from the area patrolled by the U.S. Border Patrol's Yuma station, the busiest of the Patrol's 143 outposts.

    Migrants in the region walk some 25 miles through the scrub-covered desert with summer temperatures often exceeding 100 degrees, and then hop on cargo trains to reach their destination.

    Laureano Miranda, a 37-year-old farm worker from Mexico's Sinaloa state, said he was trying to get back to a construction job in Los Angeles.

    Miranda and six relatives, who were sewing pieces of carpet to their shoes to avoid leaving footprints, planned to wait for nightfall and start walking across the border 25 miles west of where the troops were stationed.

    Miranda, who earned about $6 a day picking tomatoes in Sinaloa, said he had heard about the deployment but planned to cross into Arizona anyway.

    "If there are soldiers or not it's the same thing, because it's always been difficult to cross," Miranda said. "Here, we depend on our luck."

    Miranda said he made it into the United States on the first try last year, but he expected a more difficult journey this time.

    "We've heard that there are soldiers and armed 'migrant hunters' but we have to try," Miranda said. "If we don't make it in three tries, then we'll go back home."
     
  2. Motion

    Motion Senior Member

    Messages:
    2,258
    Likes Received:
    116
    Maybe this is what the U.S gov't should have been doing all alone as far as border security. I wonder what effect this will have on drugs comming aross the Mexican border into the U.S?


    I've said before that these crack downs on illegal immigration will be good for Mexico in the long run because it will force the Mexican gov't to actually reform it's economy and deal with corruption once it's apparent that Mexican citizens just can't cross the border like they used to. I think illegal immigration has distracted the Mexican gov't from taking seriously the need for it's own economic reforms. Illegal immigration has become a "safety valve" for Mexico.
     
  3. Dr Phibes

    Dr Phibes Banned

    Messages:
    528
    Likes Received:
    0
    Yeah youre right man! This way they could increase the supply of coke that
    Bushies dad sells in the U.S.A from south america. Its a stroke of genius on behalf of the bush family. I expect the supply to increase 3 fold in the next 5 years. With all them troops guarding it - none will be stolen now
     
  4. Motion

    Motion Senior Member

    Messages:
    2,258
    Likes Received:
    116
    If that happens then how will it be explained how more cocaine is comming in while the National Guard is on the border? So if what you're saying is true then it would look too supicious wouldn't it?
     
  5. Dr Phibes

    Dr Phibes Banned

    Messages:
    528
    Likes Received:
    0
    Not really -
    http://bushwatch.org/family.htm
    now look under 1959 1971 1976 1983
    then do some more research on the bush family and how their empire
    is founded on gold fillings from the teeth of jews executed in concentration
    camps - and columbian cocaine deals
    http://www.hereinreality.com/familyvalues.html

     
  6. Motion

    Motion Senior Member

    Messages:
    2,258
    Likes Received:
    116
    If that's true then wouldn't Jews be raising hell about that?
     
  7. Politics are awesome

    Politics are awesome Politics suck

    Messages:
    2,139
    Likes Received:
    0
    They are in on the conspiracy, remember?


    If such "information" was true, it wouldn't remain so freely available. :rolleyes:


    (Way to go, National Guard!)
     

Share This Page

  1. This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
    By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.
    Dismiss Notice