Sensing change illegal migrants
rush to the border - Mexicans hurrying to Arizona anticipating passage of
guest-worker plan
Since 04-14-06
April 12, 2006
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/12291035/
NOGALES, Mexico - At a shelter overflowing with
migrants airing their blistered feet, Francisco Ramirez nursed muscles sore from
trekking through the Arizona desert — a trip that failed when his wife did not
have the strength to go on.
He said the couple would rest for a few days, then try again, a plan echoed by
dozens reclining on rickety bunk beds and carpets tossed on the floor after
risking violent bandits and the harsh desert in unsuccessful attempts to get
into the United States.
The shelter’s manager, Francisco Loureiro, said he has not seen such a rush of
migrants since 1986, when the United States allowed 2.6 million illegal
residents to get American citizenship.
Story continues below ? advertisement
This time, the draw is a bill before the U.S. Senate that could legalize some of
the 11 million people now illegally in the United States while tightening border
security. Migrants are hurrying to cross over in time to qualify for a possible
guest-worker program — and before the journey becomes even harder.
“Every time there is talk in the north of legalizing migrants, people get their
hopes up, but they don’t realize how hard it will be to cross,” Loureiro said.
A busy region
South-central Arizona is the busiest migrant-smuggling area, and detentions by
the U.S. Border Patrol there are up more than 26 percent this fiscal year —
105,803 since Oct. 1, compared with 78,024 for the same period a year ago. Along
the entire border, arrests are up 9 percent.
Maria Valencia, a spokeswoman for U.S. Customs and Border Protection, said the
rise in detentions did not necessarily mean more people were crossing. She
attributed at least some of the additional arrests to an increase in the number
of Border Patrol agents.
“We’ve sent more technology and agents there, and I think that’s had an impact,”
she said.
But Loureiro, who has managed the shelter for 24 years, said the debate in
Congress has triggered a surge in migrants. In March, 2,000 migrants stayed at
the shelter — 500 more than last year.
Many migrants said they were being encouraged to come now by relatives living in
the United States.
One of them is Ramirez, a 30-year-old who earned about $80 a week at a rebar
factory in Mexico’s central state of Michoacan.
‘We want to try our luck’
He spent an entire night walking through the Arizona desert with his wife, Edith
Mondragon, 29. When her legs cramped, their guide abandoned them and the couple
turned themselves in to U.S. authorities. They were deported.
But they said they would try again when they regained their strength.
“We want to try our luck up there,” Mondragon said. “We can’t go back to
Michoacan because there is no future there.”
Ramirez said the draw was not only the prospect of work in Minnesota, where two
of his brothers milk cows on a ranch. He was also excited about the idea he
might be able to do it legally.
MIGRANT DEATHS
“My brothers said there is plenty of work there, and that it looks like they
will start giving (work) permits,” he said.
Many of the migrants also are being driven by a desire to get into the United
States before the likelihood that lawmakers further fortify the border.
Since the United States tightened security at the main crossing points in Texas
and California in the 1990s, hundreds of thousands of migrants have turned to
the hard-to-patrol, mesquite-covered Arizona desert, risking rape, robbery and
murder at the hands of gangs and now facing armed U.S. civilian groups.
Welcome to Sasabe
About 2,000 people a day pass through Sasabe, a hamlet of just a few dozen
houses and a Western Union office west of Nogales, says Grupo Beta, a Mexican
government-sponsored group that tries to discourage migrants from crossing the
border and helps people stranded in the desert.
Story continues below ? advertisement
On a recent afternoon, at least 40 vans overflowing with migrants arrived in the
desert near Sasabe in less than an hour. Migrants and their smugglers waited for
nightfall before starting a desert trek that would involve up to a week of
walking in baking heat during the day and biting cold at night.
Grupo Beta agent Miguel Martinez mans a checkpoint 20 miles south of Sasabe,
where he warns of the dangers of the desert, such as bandits armed with knives
or guns who order migrants to strip naked, rob them and sometimes rape them.
He also tells about the volunteer border-watch groups that have sprung up in
Arizona.
“Right now there are migrant hunters who are armed, and you should be careful,”
Martinez told a group traveling in a rickety van missing some of its windows.
Robbery in the U.S.
At Grupo Beta’s office in Nogales, Raul Gonzalez, 44,
said he walked in the Arizona desert for five days before turning himself in
when the blisters on his feet started bleeding and his left leg swelled.
Like most migrants interviewed for this story, Gonzalez said he was robbed at
gunpoint just after crossing into the United States. “The guides and the robbers
are all the same,” he said.
Gonzalez said the first time he sneaked into the United States, he did it
through Tijuana, across the border from San Diego. He said he worked illegally
at a printing shop in Chicago for 15 years but got homesick before he could
settle the paperwork for legal residence.
Despite the robbery and his failed trek, Gonzalez said he would try again once
his feet heal. His bricklayer’s salary of about $60 a week in the western state
of Jalisco simply is not enough to provide for his four children.
“It’s hard to cross,” he said. “But it’s harder to see your children have little
to eat.”