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Mexican immigrants
- Subject: Mexican immigrants
- From: Other News - Roberto Savio / IPS <soros at topica.email-publisher.com>
- Date: Wed, 22 Oct 2003 01:59:47 +0200
//Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited, article sent for information purposes.// A grim gamble Mexican immigrants bet their lives they can make it across the U.S. border through the blazing Arizona desert. Poverty drives them; hope lures them. But in ever greater numbers, the desert is killing them. By Michael Riley Denver Post Staff Writer Sunday, October 19, 2003 - TUCSON - Along with coyotes, turkey vultures and a heat so intense it can melt the soles of tennis shoes, the desert can turn a 180-pound body into a skeleton in less than three weeks. What ends up on the stainless steel tables and in the adjacent, industrial-size freezer in the Pima County coroner's office are not so much bodies as they are relics of the desert's destructive power. What remains along with the bones and bits of desiccated flesh are the few things the people who die crossing this desert took with them: A note from a grandmother, the words "vaya con Dios" - "go with God" - printed neatly at the bottom. A wedding ring sewn into the cuff of a woman's pants to protect it against bandits. A photo of a dark-eyed woman staring blankly into the camera, a smiling child on her lap. Together, these artifacts tell the story of the worst summer of immigrant deaths on record in Arizona. The U.S. Border Patrol says at least 151 immigrants died attempting to illegally cross from Mexico into the United States during a 12-month period ending Sept. 30. Human rights groups put the toll higher - at 205 - saying that Border Patrol figures do not include all the bodies found by local law enforcement. Last year, at least 145 immigrants died on the trek. In July, at the height of summer, temperatures regularly exceeded 105 degrees. On a single day - July 15 - eight people died in separate incidents along the state's 350-mile border with Mexico. The immigrants enter the country illegally across routes deliberately chosen to avoid guards and billions of dollars in technology that Congress has poured into the country's southern border over the last decade, mostly in Texas and California, channeling more immigrants into Arizona. Deaths sharpen debate In all, perhaps a million people attempted to sneak into the country through Arizona last year, guided by immigrant smugglers known as coyotes and using the sheer size and remoteness of the desert to their advantage. Most made it across, betting the lure of the world's richest economy against the slim chance of death. There are more than 8 million illegal immigrants in the country now, a number that grows by up to 15 percent a year, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. "People keep crossing the border for the same reason I keep flying. The odds are, I'll make it safely to where I'm going," said Nestor Rodriguez of the Center for Immigration Research at the University of Houston. But the rising death toll has deeply divided this state, from the grassroots up. Armed vigilantes track the immigrants in the desert, while nuns and doctors come to their aid with medical supplies and water. Nationally, the border deaths have sharpened an already rancorous immigration debate with the urgency of human tragedy. "No one yet has died coming through a port of entry. There is a safe way to come into the United States of America. It's not our fault if people choose other ways that are dangerous," said U.S. Rep. Tom Tancredo, R-Littleton, who last toured the Arizona border in March. "Here's what the debate has to be about: Shall we have borders or shall we not?" Tancredo said. The Rev. John Fife, founder of a group called Samaritan Patrol, counters that the pull of jobs and the push of poverty will overcome just about any obstacle short of the kind used by East Germany to seal off West Berlin. "I just kind of doubt the U.S. is willing to mine the border with Mexico and issue shoot-to-kill orders," said Fife, whose group sends doctors and nurses into the desert to aid the immigrants. The stories of the illegal immigrants are a palette of misfortune and hope. A 16-year-old girl who convinced her parents that she had a better life waiting for her working in a butcher shop in Kentucky than a small village in Mexico - and died far from either. A young Mexican man who safely made the crossing, then helped authorities find the body of a friend who died in his arms, a victim of dehydration and heatstroke. An 80-year-old great-grandmother who survived the desert while her daughter, a woman in her mid-40s, did not. Many of the immigrants had no idea of the dangers they faced. Some crossed in high heels and tank tops, or pushed baby strollers. Others, beginning a trek that can take as long as three days, carried only enough water to last an adult walking through the desert a few hours. The victims often died alone, but they rarely started that way. The smugglers, called "coyotes," instruct their groups to leave stragglers behind. Most obey. Their stories represent lives gambled and lost. "It's like running a gantlet. If you can get to the other side, you can get a job," said the Rev. Robin Hoover. Hoover founded Humane Borders, a Tucson group that carries as much as 500 gallons of water to 41 desert aid stations each week for immigrants who often can't physically carry enough liquid to sustain them through the trek. "There are thousands and thousands that make it every year. The problem is that every year there are more and more that don't." Post / Hyoung Chang For 75 miles along Arizona’s Tohono O’Odham reservation, only four strands of barbed wire and the occasional warning sign separate Mexico from the United States. But the brutal climate claims its own toll: On a single day in July, eight people died attempting to cross the border illegally in Arizona. Mirages and hallucinations When most illegal immigrants set off from staging points in Mexico, they are laden with heavy, gallon-size bottles of water tied around their necks or to their waists. The groups can be heard from hundreds of feet away, the distinct clip-clop of jug against jug breaking the desert silence. But in the severe summer heat, it becomes almost impossible to carry enough water to stay alive. As the body dehydrates, it eats away at its own muscles to release more moisture. That, in turn, sends contaminants rushing into the blood, prompting the kidneys to shut down. As the body's core temperature rises, the brain begins to swell, which can cause hallucinations. Rescuers say they've found groups of immigrants who have circled the same patch of desert for days or, lost in their final delusions, had begun eating dirt while believing that they were drinking water. Others, desperate to preserve every drop of moisture, drink their own urine. "They'll begin to see things, like the old mirage scene in the movies," said Mark Adams, chief of the ambulance service in the town of Sells on the Tohono O'Odham Indian reservation, which sits astride a major smuggling route. As their mental functions deteriorate, the travelers forget to use the sun's position to orient themselves, "or they'll forget to follow that road on the horizon they were supposed to be using as a guide," he said. What's striking to him and others, Adams said, is the increasing number of women, children and elderly who cross each season. Because crossing the border has become more difficult since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, it has become more common for family members to join husbands and fathers in the United States than for the men to continue the tradition of returning home and recrossing each year. Experts say the greater vulnerability of those making the crossing illegally helps explain why deaths have increased even though the number trying to enter the U.S. has slumped because the economy is weaker. The women get sick more quickly, rescuers say. And those traveling with children often give up their water so the children survive. Though women make up 15 percent of those caught attempting to cross in Arizona, they account for nearly 25 percent of those who died. "The thing that really gets me is the pregnant ladies that come across, and both the mother and child die," said Dan Potter, a Sells paramedic. "Or maybe she'll give birth out there and the baby dies. Every life is precious, I know, but for me, those cases are the roughest." Many immigrant smugglers give the weakest crossers amphetamines or ephedrine, the stimulant linked to the death of Baltimore Orioles pitcher Steve Bechler in February. Last June, a "coyote" leading 40 immigrants across the Tohono O'Odham reservation gave several women red and white pills because they were slowing his group down. One of the women, 25-year-old Elizabeth Acosta, became dizzy, collapsed and died, according to police. The stimulants "give you that sense of being able to push farther faster, but they increase your core temperature and your demand for water," said Adams. That makes it more difficult for medical workers to save the victims once they are found, he said. Once the immigrants are in the desert, an individual life is of less concern than the safety of the group. A pulled muscle or sudden illness can be a death sentence. But an immigrant carrying money or anything else of value may be able to strike one last bargain. "If somebody is really near dying, the coyotes will sell them IV fluid" for $10 to $50, depending on the victim's desperation and ability to pay, said Potter. "If more than one (person) needs it, there's usually only one catheter, so it's not too sterile. We've even run across people who were dead that still had the (IV) bottle hanging on them," Potter said. But amid the profiteering and deceit, there is heroism. After walking in the desert with a small group for two days in early August, Victor Plascencia collapsed of exhaustion and dehydration. While the others went on, one man, Francisco Lara, stayed behind, built a shelter, and comforted Plascencia, who died in his arms. Facing certain arrest and deportation, Lara walked into a Border Patrol office in the town of Ajo, Ariz., and told officers there he wanted to help find Plascencia's body. Still sick, his feet badly blistered, Lara led a patrol back into the desert. "A lot of these individuals, they just continue on their journey. This guy came back to find the body of his friend," said Karin Neuhaus, a detective of the Tohono O'Odham Police Department who participated in that search. "That made a difference, and you could see it in the way he was treated by the officers out there. He won their respect." If there was anyone traveling with 18-year-old Jacinto Soto, he or she gave no thought to coming back. When rescuers found Soto's body in a remote corner of the Tohono O'Odham reservation in early September, he was face down and without water. He had managed to crawl into the meager shade of a palo verde tree. Faline Harshbarger, a university graduate student and volunteer, was with the aid group that found Soto's body. What was left of his skin had turned to leather and his legs were gone, eaten away by coyotes. Medical workers told Harshbarger it looked like the young immigrant had been dead about two weeks. In a year of carting water and medical supplies into the desert with a group called Samaritan Patrol, Soto's was the first body Harshbarger had found. The event so moved her, she said, that she plans to visit his family next February in Chiapas, Mexico's southernmost state and one of its poorest. She plans to give Soto's parents an old, band-less watch she found in his pocket along with what details she knows of his death. "There are so many people that just never find out what happened to their loved ones," Harshbarger said. "I want to be able to show them pictures of where he died. I want them to know how brave their son was." -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- "Other News" is a personal initiative seeking to provide information that should be in the media but is not, because of commercial criteria. It welcomes contributions from everybody. Work areas include information on global issues, north-sutrh relations, gobernability of globalization. The "Other News" motto is a phrase which appeared on the wall of Barcelona’s old Customs Office, at the beginning of 2003:”What walls utter, media keeps silent”. Roberto Savio ==================================================================== Update your profile here: http://soros.u.tep1.com/survey/?b1dnYs.b6MSBN.aW5mb0Bw Unsubscribe here: http://soros.u.tep1.com/survey/?b1dnYs.b6MSBN.aW5mb0Bw.u Delivered by Topica Email Publisher, http://www.email-publisher.com/
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