Illegal Entry From Mexico to U.S. Spikes
NewsMax.com Wires
Tuesday, April 27, 2004
SASABE, Mexico After a four-year decline, illegal
immigration from Mexico is spiking as several thousand migrants a
day rush across the border in hopes of getting work visas under a
program President Bush proposed. Many also are trying to beat
tighter security to come in June.
The U.S. Border Patrol told The Associated Press that detentions jumped 25 percent to 535,000 in the six months ending March 31 compared to a
year ago.
Near Sasabe, a town bordering the Arizona desert that's the
busiest illegal border crossing area, an average of 2,000 people
arrive daily.
On a recent day, at a break in a barbed-wire fence outside
Sasabe, about 300 migrants scrambled out of 10 trucks and four vans
within 30 minutes with their smugglers, who led crowds along a worn
trail. As the sun set, they disappeared into rolling hills that
hide the treacherous desert.
Raudel Sanchez, a 22-year-old farm worker, said he wanted to get
back to his job at a Minnesota ranch.
Sanchez crossed into the United States through Sasabe three
years ago, but says the journey is getting more difficult. He
walked three days in the desert and was out of water when he was
caught in Arizona and deported.
Undeterred, he said he planned to take a bus to Altar, a
northern city about 70 miles from the border where migrants hire
smugglers. From there, he planned to head back to Sasabe and cross
again.
"It's already very hard to cross, but it's going to be even
harder," he said in Nogales. "I need to try again, at least one
more time, and if I fail, I'll go back home."
Many migrants are betting on the approval of Bush's migration
proposal, which faces an uphill battle in Congress. About 75
percent of those arrested are Mexican, while the rest are from
Central America and other places, U.S. customs officials said.
In January, Bush proposed a guest-worker plan that would give
legal status to undocumented migrants already working in the United
States and to those outside the country who can prove they have
been offered a job.
Because it's hard to get a job offer while in Mexico, many are
heading north now, hoping to get settled before a program is in
place.
Mark Krikorian, executive director for the Center for
Immigration Studies, a group that favors stricter immigration
policies, said the rise in illegal migration also shot up in 1986
when an amnesty was announced.
Illegal Aliens Get the Message
"Illegal aliens will respond to the messages the government
sends," Krikorian said. "When we send the message that we are
thinking about amnesty, they decide it may be worth it to try to
cross."
Illegal migration had been declining along the U.S.-Mexico
border since 2000. U.S. Border Patrol figures show detentions
dropped from 1.6 million in 2000 to 905,000 in the fiscal year that
ended last Sept. 30.
There is no exact data on the number of people crossing
illegally. But in an indication of increased traffic, 535,000
illegal migrants were arrested along the U.S.-Mexico border from
Oct. 1 to March 31, said Gloria Chavez of the U.S. Customs and
Border Protection Bureau.
In the same period, the Border Patrol's Tucson sector detained
70,000 more people, an increase of 49 percent.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection Commissioner Robert Bonner
attributes part of the jump to increased security. "The main
reason we're seeing an increase in apprehensions is because the
Border Patrol is more effective, particularly in the Tucson
sector," he said.
But Mexican officials are also seeing an increase. Grupo Beta, a
Mexican government-sponsored group that tries to discourage
migrants from crossing and aids those stranded in the desert, said
56,000 migrants went through Sasabe in March compared to 41,000 in
March 2003.
In Altar, a farming town that has become the gathering point for
those heading to Arizona, street vendors sell backpacks, water jugs
and salt pills by the thousands.
The modest homes around the plaza, crowded with triple-decker
bunk beds, serve as makeshift motels for migrants. They're almost
always at capacity, said Francisco Garcia, a former mayor who now
volunteers at the town's only migrant shelter.
"We're a town with a population of 6,000, and there have been
weeks when we have twice as many people," Garcia said.
Why Wait?
Under new security measures, about 300 more U.S. border agents
will be deployed by June 1 along the Mexico-Arizona border. The
number of border agents assigned to the Tucson sector will
eventually increase from 1,800 to 2,500, Bonner said.
Many of the additional agents already have been sent to the
Tohono O'odham Indian reservation, an area west of Sasabe where
illegal migrant traffic has ballooned, said Border Patrol spokesman
Charles Griffin.
The heightened border security is driving more migrants to more
treacherous desert routes between Sonoyta and San Luis Rio Colorado
in western Arizona, said Enrique Enriquez, an agent with Mexico's
Grupo Beta.
"Migrants are telling us they're crossing through Sonoyta
because there are fewer Border Patrol agents there," Enriquez
said. "But with the new changes, we expect more migrants will
start going west of there," where there are even fewer roads and
people to help stranded migrants.
Grupo Beta plans to assign rescuers to Sonoyta in May, Enriquez
said. Every year, hundreds of migrants die in the desert, where
temperatures soar above 100 degrees in summer.
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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