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Mexican cops warn migrants at borderAnd this would be a bad thing because???????--The Webmistress |
By Jerry SeperApril 7, 2005 |
| NACO, Ariz. -- Mexican police, humanitarian workers and military
personnel are trying to dissuade migrants from illegally entering the
United States until after a month long protest here against lax
enforcement along the U.S.-Mexico border. The Mexicans are telling the prospective border crossers that Minuteman Project protesters will hurt them when they enter Arizona, and also are moving the migrants away from the zone being patrolled by the protesters. The Mexican government has been distributing a red flier headlined "¡Peligro!" meaning "danger," and featuring an icon of two crossed rifles. The flier warns readers that hundreds of "vigilantes," whom it says could be armed but are not part of the U.S. Border Patrol, will guard that segment of the border 24 hours a day all month. Enrique Enriques Palafox, a commander of Grupo Beta, a Mexican government-funded humanitarian organization, said his group wants to protect the migrants and is willing to "terrify" them into delaying their journey. "We know [the Minuteman volunteers] are armed and our job is to protect migrants," said Bertha de la Rosa, a coordinator for Grupo Beta, which yesterday loaded pickup trucks with migrants on the Mexican side of the border and relocated them. A Mexican official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, yesterday said migration from Mexico has dropped by 50 percent along the 20-mile stretch of border that is being monitored by about 200 Minuteman volunteers. Border Patrol officials have acknowledged a drop in the number of illegal aliens apprehended since the protest began, but said the reduction could also be attributed to the presence along the border here of Mexican police and military personnel. "It doesn't matter whether the reason is that we are on the border or that the Mexican government has clamped down on their side because of us," Minuteman organizer Chris Simcox said. "The object of our protest was to show that a presence on the border would significantly impact on the number of people crossing into the United States," he said. "I think it is clear we have already shown that to be true," said
Mr. Simcox, a newspaper publisher and founder of the Civil Homeland
Division organization in Arizona. |