Thursday, August 12, 2010

Singapore PM: We won't let in too many foreigners

SINGAPORE (AP) -- Singapore's prime minister sought Sunday to ease concerns that the city-state is allowing in too many foreign workers who will undermine national unity.

The surge of foreigners living in Singapore has become a hot topic in the lead-up to the next general election, which the government must call by February 2012. Many of the newcomers are from China, India and other Asian countries.

"We will control the inflow, to ensure that it is not too fast and not too large," Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said during a speech ahead of Monday's National Day. "And we will make clear that citizens come first."

Read more here.


[Posted by Clarissa Arafiles]

How Mexico Treats Its Illegal Aliens

Mexican President Felipe Calderon has accused Arizona of opening the door "to intolerance, hate, discrimination and abuse in law enforcement." But Arizona has nothing on Mexico when it comes to cracking down on illegal aliens. While open-borders activists decry new enforcement measures signed into law in "Nazi-zona" last week, they remain deaf, dumb or willfully blind to the unapologetically restrictionist policies of our neighbors to the south.

The Arizona law bans sanctuary cities that refuse to enforce immigration laws, stiffens penalties against illegal alien day laborers and their employers, makes it a misdemeanor for immigrants to fail to complete and carry an alien registration document, and allows the police to arrest immigrants unable to show documents proving they are in the U.S. legally. If those rules constitute the racist, fascist, xenophobic, inhumane regime that the National Council of La Raza, Al Sharpton, Catholic bishops and their grievance-mongering followers claim, then what about these regulations and restrictions imposed on foreigners?

A conservative perspective on Mexico's immigration laws. Read more here.

[Posted by Clarissa Arafiles]

Thai ship and suspect human cargo nears Canada

A Thai ship involved in human trafficking was reported Thursday to be inside Canadian waters and closing on the shore, with 500 Tamil refugees from Sri Lanka aboard.

A tortuous voyage by the Thai-registered Harin Panich 19, under a new name, M/V Sun Sea, was believed organised from Bangkok by operatives of the Tamil Tigers.

The purpose of the voyage is unknown, as are most details, including the recent background of the ship, built and originally owned by the Harin Group, which has its head office in Bangkholeam district along New Road, Bangkok.

The Sri Lankan government has warned that the passengers include terrorists from the Tamil Tigers, and Canada reportedly has taken the warning seriously. Canada lists the Tamil Tigers as a terrorist organisation.

The ship was reported to be involved in clandestine operations last May, and the Thai Navy put out an alert across the region, asking other countries to help to locate the Harin Panich 19, aka M/V Sun Sea.

The 30-year-old, 900-tonne vessel was built at the Harin Panich Shipyard on the Chao Phraya River near Bangkok. For most of the time since 1980, the 59-metre vessel carried general cargo between Thailand other countries in the region, especially Malaysian Borneo and Singpore.

To read more, click here...

Alberta Wins Battle to Bring in More Foreign Workers

The federal Conservative government has acquiesced to provincial demands -- including from Alberta -- to ease its restrictions on the number of immigrants that can permanently reside in the provinces each year.

Ottawa controls the number of permanent immigrants that can annually settle across Canada through the provincial nominee program, with the current cap at 4,400 in Alberta -- well short of the 5,000 Alberta had requested this year.

Wild Rose Country and other western provinces have been lobbying the Harper government for months to scrap its plans to impose a lower cap on the number of immigrants arriving through the nominee program. Rather, the provinces have been urging Ottawa to ratchet up the number of workers they can nominate to the federal government to bring to their jurisdictions to fill permanent jobs.

Federal officials initially indicated in June the provinces wouldn't receive as many nominees as hoped, but announced Tuesday they will increase the numbers after reviewing their case loads and immigration targets for the year.

The additional nominees are critical to sustaining the short-term economic turnaround as well as long-term growth, said Alberta Immigration Minister Thomas Lukaszuk.

" It would be a move in the right direction," Lukaszuk said about the federal decision. "We will be seeing more and more permanent labour shortages. We have to look to immigration towards solving this problem."

To read more, click here...


Tuesday, August 10, 2010

France's Immigrant Chefs are Fighting for Legal Life

By David Chazan BBC News
Immigrant working in a Paris restaurant Some unions back the campaign by kitchen staff to be legalised.

The French cherish their culinary tradition and it's a big attraction for foreign visitors to France, the world's most popular tourist destination.

But few tourists realise that these days, many chefs and most kitchen staff in Paris and other big cities are immigrants from Africa and Asia.

Trade unions say a lot of these under-chefs of French cuisine are working illegally in France - but many are paying taxes and social charges.

Despite high unemployment and France's difficulties in integrating immigrant communities, the unions are backing a campaign by illegal immigrant workers to gain the right to live in France legally.
Continue reading the main story
“Start Quote

We're not hooligans, we're workers”

End Quote Diaby Gandega Kitchen worker from Mali

"We're doing the jobs the French don't want," says Diaby Gandega, an illegal immigrant from Mali in west Africa who slipped into France four years ago and works as a dishwasher.

Following clashes with police in mainly immigrant suburbs, President Sarkozy has proposed that foreign-born French nationals be stripped of their citizenship if they commit crimes or are found to be polygamists.

But Mr Gandega says he and many like him are paying into the social security system in France without gaining the rights or benefits enjoyed by other workers.
Kitchen worker Diaby Gandega gets advice from a union representative at a protest camp in Paris. Many illegal workers pay taxes but have to put up with low pay and have no job security

To read more, click here...

Charities Say Government Fails Trafficking Victims

Charities say government fails trafficking victims
By Dominic Casciani BBC News
Many trafficking victims are forced into prostitution.

Charities have accused the government of failing in their first test to help victims of trafficking.

They have criticised the decision not to adopt an EU directive which they say will give victims better protection and lead to more trafficker prosecutions.

The Home Office says the UK already has ample measures to help victims.

The European directive on preventing and combating trafficking is expected to be approved in the autumn. Denmark and the UK are not signing up to it.

But charities, including Anti-Slavery International, said the trafficking of people throughout Europe demanded a cross-border solution and that the UK should step into line with other EU states.

Supporters of the proposed directive say it is better than the existing European convention which sets out how best to deal with the criminals and to protect the victims.

It aims to establish common standards across member states for the prosecution of traffickers - but it also proposes greater protections for victims who have been involved in crime in the country they are held in.

"Human Trafficking is a brutal form of organised crime and combating it is a key priory of the new government”

This could mean that some people who are trafficked into criminal enterprises in the UK, such as the sex trade or cannabis farming, could not be charged over false immigration papers forced on them by the gang responsible for their move.

Klara Skrivankova, of Anti-Slavery International, said: "Despite significant positive steps, the Government cannot become complacent and say that the UK is already doing enough.

"Without international cooperation the government will lose the battle with the traffickers. By choosing not to opt in to the directive the Government is failing in its efforts to combat this transnational crime."



To read more, click here...

Monday, August 2, 2010

For full story, click here.

Saturday, July 31, 2010

Man Arrested in Restaurant Immigration Raid

30 July 2010 Last updated at 09:55 ET

Man arrested in restaurant immigration raid

A man has been arrested after a raid on a restaurant in Ballymena over his right to work in the UK.

Officers visited the New Manley chinese restaurant on Springwell Street on Wednesday.

A Chinese man was arrested for immigration offences and is due to be deported.

If the restaurant owners did not carry out thorough checks on his right to work they could face a fine of up to £10,000.

The raid was part of a UK-wide operation to combat illegal immigration ordered by the government.

To read the rest, click here...

Passport Fraudster Jailed

Passport fraudster jailed

28 July 2010 (United Kingdom News)

A fraudster who used a fake passport to get a job has been jailed, following an investigation by our officers.

Muhammed Afzal, 41-years-old, was arrested whilst working at a McDonalds restaurant on Oxford Road in Reading on 11 July.

During a subsequent search of his house on Mason Street our officers discovered the fake documentation, a Norwegian passport, driving licence and other documents, all in his "false" Norwegian identity.

He had used them to claim he had the right to work in the UK and gain employment, when in actual fact he was a Pakistani national who had over-stayed his visa.


To read the rest, click here...

Three Found Guilty Over Sham Marriage Scam

Three found guilty over sham marriage scam

29 July 2010

Three men, including a vicar, have today been found guilty of being behind a massive scam to organise hundreds of sham marriages in East Sussex.

Reverend Alex Brown, Ukrainian national Vladymyr Buchak and immigration lawyer Michael Adelasoye were all convicted of conspiring to facilitate braches of immigration law following an eight week trial at Lewes Crown Court.

Brown had earlier pleaded guilty to a charge of carrying out marriage ceremonies without banns of matrimony being published.

Their convictions follow one of the biggest ever investigations by the UK Border Agency's South East region immigration crime team, a specialist unit of agency investigators and officers seconded from Sussex Police.

Between them, the trio were found to be involved in around 360 weddings at the Church of St Peter and St Paul in St Leonards-on-Sea, East Sussex, between July 2005 and June 2009. Reverend Brown officiated at all the ceremonies. In the vast majority of these cases the reason for the marriage was to assist applications for residency in the UK.

To read the rest, click here...

Monday, July 26, 2010

Mexico braces for effects of Arizona immigration law

MEXICO CITY — The other side of the border is also preparing for the implementation of Arizona's new immigration law, which could lead to a surge of deportees back to Mexico.

Migrant shelters along the border in Mexico say they're bracing for new arrivals after the law goes into effect Thursday.

Mexico's government has added more workers to its consulate in Phoenix to assist detained Mexicans. Migrants who have been deported say they're watching to see how the law is enforced before deciding whether to try again to cross the border illegally into Arizona.

Read the full article here.

[Posted by Clarissa Arafiles]

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Some freed Cuban dissidents can apply for immigration, U.S. says

Havana, Cuba (CNN) -- Freed Cuban political prisoners and their families are invited to "explore their options" for possible immigration to the United States, a U.S. official told CNN on Tuesday.

On July 7, Cuba committed to releasing 52 jailed political activists, according to the country's Roman Catholic Church. But the question remains whether they will be allowed to stay in Cuba.

The U.S. Interests Section in Havana, which functions like an embassy, initially reached out to the group as a whole, but then changed its approach to focus on specific cases, said spokeswoman Gloria Berbena.

Read the full article here.

[Posted by Clarissa Arafiles]

Monday, July 19, 2010

No visa required: Dollar-seeking Cubans flood Ecuador, provoke backlash

QUITO, Ecuador — A wave of Cuban fortune-seekers is turning Ecuador as an alternative to United States — creating an anti-immigrant backlash in a small South American country that is itself a major source of migrants abroad.

Some 50,000 Cubans have entered the country since its leftist government dropped all visa requirements in 2008 and the sudden proliferation has officials warning that some Cubans are obtaining Ecuadorean citizenship fraudulently.

Some see Ecuador as a stop on their journey to join Cuban-American communities in the United States, and officials say smugglers have carried Cubans up the Pacific coast to Mexico and the United States.


Read more here.

[Posted by Clarissa Arafiles]

Haitians get 6 more months to apply to stay in US

MIAMI — As Haiti marked the six month of struggle after a catastrophic earthquake, the U.S. on Monday gave Haitians more time to apply to legally stay and work here so they can support the rebuilding efforts.

Haitians already living in the U.S. illegally when the earthquake struck Jan. 12 now have until January to apply for temporary protected status, which allows immigrants from countries experiencing armed conflict or environmental disasters to stay and work in the U.S. for 18 months.

Read more here.

[Posted by Clarissa Arafiles]

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Ecuador, Argentina join Mexico in legal fight against SB 1070

East Valley Tribune on msnbc.com
updated 7/14/2010 1:25:10 AM ET

Two more Latin American countries added their own objections Tuesday to Arizona's new immigration law.

In legal papers filed in federal court, Luis Gallegos, the ambassador to the United States from Ecuador, said his country wants to join Mexico in the fight to convince U.S. District Court Judge Susan Bolton to block the state from enforcing the law.

"Similar to Mexico, Ecuador has a substantial and compelling interest in ensuring that its bilateral diplomatic relations with the government of the United States of America are transparent, consistent and reliable, and not frustrated by the actions of individual U.S. states, in this case, Arizona," Gallegos wrote. He said SB 1070 "raises substantial challenges" to relations between the two countries.

Read More Here

(Posted By Barry Christensen, July 14, 2010)

Canada, U.S. announce enhanced border security plans

OTTAWA — The Harper government has reached an agreement with the Obama administration to implement a new cross-border approach on infrastructure vulnerable to terrorist attacks or disasters.

The agreement establishes a joint-action plan to share information on critical infrastructure and develop tools to protect and improve the resiliency of key assets and services in case of an emergency.

Read more here.

[Posted by Clarissa Arafiles]

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Mexico Files Amicus Brief Against Arizona Immigration Law

Mexico filed an amicus brief this week against the new Arizona immigration law that argues the new law may damage US-Mexico relations and lead to discrimination against Mexican citizens. The Phoenix Business Journal reports that Mexico filed a brief in favor of the federal lawsuit which claims the law "unfairly targets Hispanics" and that "immigration is a federal matter."

The new law allows law enforcement officials in Arizona to request proof of legal immigration, residency, or citizenship of anyone they suspect might be an illegal immigrant. The legislation also makes it unlawful to seek day-labor on public streets and a misdemeanor to be in Arizona illegally, according to the Washington Examiner. It is currently scheduled to go into effect July 29.

The full article is posted here.

[Posted by Clarissa Arafiles]

India and China Less Crowded as Compared to Britain

Statistics show that Britain is much more crowded than India and China.
According to the Overpopulation Index, England is the most crowded country in Europe and the fourth most crowded in the world.

Singapore, Israel and Kuwait occupy the first three positions, while the UK is ranked 17th in the list of 130 countries.

Sir Andrew Green, of MigrationWatch UK, said: "It's obvious to everyone that England, particularly the South-east, is heavily overcrowded.

"According to official figures two-thirds of population growth in the next 20 years will be as a result of immigration. Such an increase in our population will put even further pressure on our public services such as housing, schools and hospitals."

According to the Daily Express, the Overpopulation Index is thought to be the first study to rank countries according to the "sustainability" of their populations and how dependent they are on other nations for resources.



SHORT-SUMMARY:
This article is a simple comparison of rates of immigration for different foreign countries, excluding the United States. It discusses how a strong economy can cause over crowding because emigration (from these countries) is weak, but immigration (into these countries) is strong. It also dispels a few commonly held notions, like China and India being notoriously over crowded because they have such high population figures, where really countries like England and Singapore have worse per capita crowding.
To read it, go here...


Sarah Castelhano

Monday, July 12, 2010

The New Population Bomb – The Four Megatrends That Will Change the World

Foreign Affairs (Jan/Feb 2010)
By: Jack A. Goldstone

Summary: A series of looming demographic trends will greatly affect international security in the twenty-first century. How policymakers adjust to these changes now will determine the course of global political and economic stability for years to come.

Excerpts:
But improving relations is all the more important because of the growing demographic weight of poor Muslim countries and the attendant increase in Muslim immigration, especially to Europe from North Africa and the Middle East. … Strategists worldwide must consider that the world's young are becoming concentrated in those countries least prepared to educate and employ them, including some Muslim states. Any resulting poverty, social tension, or ideological radicalization could have disruptive effects in many corners of the world. But this need not be the case; the healthy immigration of workers to the developed world and the movement of capital to the developing world, among other things, could lead to better results.

But today's population bomb is the product less of absolute growth in the world's population than of changes in its age and distribution. Policymakers must therefore adapt today's global governance institutions to the new realities of the aging of the industrialized world, the concentration of the world's economic and population growth in developing countries, and the increase in international immigration.

More important than unproven tactics for increasing family size is immigration. Correctly managed, population movement can benefit developed and developing countries alike. Given the dangers of young, underemployed, and unstable populations in developing countries, immigration to developed countries can provide economic opportunities for the ambitious and serve as a safety valve for all. Countries that embrace immigrants, such as the United States, gain economically by having willing laborers and greater entrepreneurial spirit. And countries with high levels of emigration (but not so much that they experience so-called brain drains) also benefit because emigrants often send remittances home or return to their native countries with valuable education and work experience.

Read More Here

(Posted By Barry Christensen, July 12, 2010)

Two related videos worth watch relating to Muslim Population growth:
1. You tube video re: Islamic population increase (published by the Christian Right)
Watch Here
2. BBC Response to videoabove:
Watch Here

(Posted By Barry Christensen, July 14, 2010)

Thursday, April 29, 2010

The hub nation

Immigration places America at the centre of a web of global networks. So why not make it easier?

IMMIGRANTS benefit America because they study and work hard. That is the standard argument in favour of immigration, and it is correct. Leaving your homeland is a big deal. By definition, it takes get-up-and-go to get up and go, which is why immigrants are abnormally entrepreneurial. But there is another, less obvious benefit of immigration. Because they maintain links with the places they came from, immigrants help America plug into a vast web of global networks.

http://www.economist.com/research/articlesBySubject/displaystory.cfm?subjectid=894664&story_id=15954498

[Posted by: Austin Houlgate]

When the niños run out

When the niños run out

A falling birth rate, and what it means

FENCES, soldiers, infra-red cameras: the United States goes to great lengths to hold back the teeming masses across its southern border (see article). But the masses are teeming less. Mexico’s birth rate, once among the world’s highest, is in free-fall. In the 1960s Mexican mothers had nearly seven children each (whereas women in India then had fewer than six). The average now is just over two—almost the same as in the United States. The UN reckons that from 2040 the birth rate in Mexico will be the lower of the two.

http://www.economist.com/research/articlesBySubject/displaystory.cfm?subjectid=894664&story_id=15959332

[Posted by: Austin Houlgate]

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

USCIS Advisory for Foreign Nationals Stranded Due to the Icelandic Volcano Eruption

USCIS has released an advisory for foreign nationals stranded in the U.S. because of the airport closures in Europe due to the Icelandic volcano eruption. If you have exceeded or are about to exceed your authorized stay in the U.S. you may be permitted up to 30 days to depart.

read more here.

[posted by Maria Rohani]

Secretary Napolitano and USCIS Director Mayorkas Lead Naturalization Ceremony at Boston's Historic Faneuil Hall

Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Janet Napolitano and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) Director Alejandro Mayorkas today welcomed more than 400 new U.S. citizens representing 78 countries of origin at a naturalization ceremony at Boston’s historic Faneuil Hall.

read more here

[posted by Maria Rohani]

DOL Certifies Approximately 4,000 Workers in 10 States as Eligible to Apply for Trade Adjustment Assistance (TAA)

The U.S. Department of Labor announced that approximately 4,000 workers from companies in 10 states — California, Michigan, Minnesota, New Mexico, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas, Washington and Wisconsin — are eligible to apply for Trade Adjustment Assistance.

read more here.


[posted by Maria Rohani]

USCIS Received 13,500 H-1B Petitions in One Week, Continues to Accept H-1B Petitions for FY 2011

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) today announced that it continues to accept H-1B visa petitions subject to the Fiscal Year 2011 (FY 2011) cap. USCIS will monitor the number of petitions received for both the 65,000 general cap and the 20,000 U.S. master’s degree or higher educational exemption.

USCIS has received approximately 13,500 H-1B petitions counting toward the 65,000 cap and approximately 5,600 petitions for individuals with advanced degrees Fiscal Year 2011 (FY 2011) cap.

read more here.


[posted by Maria Rohani]

U.S., Netherlands Announce 1-Stop Enrollment Pilot for Expedited Trusted Traveler Program

Today, U.S. Customs and Border Protection announced that travelers interested in applying to the Global Entry and Privium Trusted Traveler programs may do so at one of five “one-stop-shop” joint enrollment centers established as a pilot initiative in the United States and the Netherlands through the Fast Low-Risk Universal Crossing (FLUX) program.

read more here.

[posted by Maria Rohani]

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Information Sharing in an Age of Terrorism: MPI Report Highlights Challenges and Proposes Way Forward for United States and Europe

WASHINGTON — The attempted Christmas Day attack on a U.S. airliner has refocused interest on the data collected by governments on international travelers, and how information sharing can be used to prevent terrorism and secure travel if properly shared and analyzed. In the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, the United States and European Union worked out agreements to expand the sharing of personal information about international travelers as a means to prevent acts of terrorism and fight international crime.

However, as a new Migration Policy Institute (MPI) report explores, negotiations on a binding international agreement that will govern the sharing of personal information for law enforcement purposes between the United States and the European Union, while high on the transatlantic policy agenda, face significant challenges.

Among them: Divergent institutional setups of U.S. and E.U. privacy agencies, conflicting views over how to guarantee privacy and personal data protection under different legal and institutional frameworks, and finding a common solution for the obligations of private companies to share information with governments.

find out more here.

[posted by Maria Rohani]

Report: Mexican Government Uses Innovative Strategy to Help its Migrants Integrate in the United States

WASHINGTON – Immigrant integration remains largely an afterthought in U.S. immigration policy discussions and the country's integration policies remain chronically underfunded and limited in scope. In the absence of coherent policies at the federal level, the responsibility for immigrant integration historically has fallen to families, employers, churches, non-governmental organizations and an increasingly restive set of state and local governments.

New partners are emerging, though. Mexico's efforts to help its migrants succeed in the United States offer a new example of an immigrant-sending country looking to improve its emigrants' lives and connect with its diaspora, according to a report released today by the Migration Policy Institute (MPI). With Mexicans accounting for one-third of all immigrants in the United States, Mexico's initiative is of particular note.

Find out more here.


[posted by Maria Rohani]

Southwest Border Violence: Issues in Identifying and Measuring Spillover Violence

There has been a recent increase in the level of drug trafficking-related violence within and
between the drug trafficking organizations in Mexico. This violence has generated concern
among U.S. policy makers that the violence in Mexico might spill over into the United States.
Currently, U.S. federal officials deny that the recent increase in drug trafficking-related violence
in Mexico has resulted in a spillover into the United States, but they acknowledge that the
prospect is a serious concern.

download PDF version of article here.

[Posted by Maria Rohani]

he Consular murders:a response from a Mexican student at UCB

Subject: Issue on Mexico

To whom it may concern,
I think that it is very irresponsible from the University to spread a
slander about Mexico. Mexico passes under a very complicated situation and
it has not received the adequate support from its neighbor, the United
States. I just want to point out three variables that make totally unfair/
slander the warning from the United States government. First, Mexico is
not Ciudad Juarez. We all know that Cd. Juarez has experienced a critical
situation of governability and violence for a long period of time. Do you
know about the muertas de Juarez? Did you know that there was a national
scandal because of the assassination of some Mexican youths? I do not
think that any Mexican denies the poor situation in Juarez. Nevertheless,
the United States has never cooperated seriously to help Mexico solving
the problem, which I do not doubt has a strong association with the
Americans appetite for Drugs. Where is the United States GOVERNMENT? Why
does it not take a respectful and bilateral foreign policy with Mexico?
We should instead being questioning the American foreign policy towards
Mexico, instead embracing it.
Second of all, I do not have any doubt that Americans will be much safer
on downtown Guadalajara, Queretaro, Aguascalientes, Zacatecas, and
Guanajuato than in downtown Los Angeles, Oakland and New York. We cannot
generalize the situation in Mexico. Mexico has many Mexicos. Although the
complicated economic and security adversities, people can still visit
Mexico. Mexico needs of support and not of slanders/arbitrariness from its
northern neighbor.
The United Sates’ diplomatic history shows us much arbitrariness. I just
need to mention the vents to resonate on people’s memory: the overthrow of
Jacobo Arbenz in Guatemala and Salvador Allende in Chile; the involvement
in many dirty wars in Central and South America; the complot that led to
Madero’s death; and the current War in Iraq (where were the nuclear
weapons?). I am especially surprised to find a unilateral and uninformed
foreign policy towards Mexico from President Obama, who took power with
the slogan of Change and Hope. He promised to change how things worked
(works) in Washington, and of course, it includes changing Washington’s
Foreign Policy towards Mexico and Latin America. Where is the Change? Why
is Berkeley--the University that distinguishes for seeking freedom and
justice for the unprotected—supporting such an irresponsible policy?
Because of its history on liberalism and because it is a research
institution, Berkeley must reevaluate its position on this issue. Is
suggesting students not to go Mexico a fair stance? Mexico needs a bilateral work, understanding, and responsibility. Mexico does not need
condemnations after having a hard time to deal with a war and with a
profound economic crisis. Again, Mexico needs of a strategic partnership
with the United States instead of slanders that end up harming much more
the image of the country; they do not help to solve our bilateral
problems, but they could make them worse and divide both countries.


Best Regards,

Sergio Hernandez Reyes
Berkeley Student

PD. It would be much more helpful for stopping violence in Mexico if you
tell the Berkeley community to stop smoking marijuana. They would
definitely contribute to prevent deaths of many Mexicans and Americas,
like the three people who unfortunately died in the U.S. Consulate at Cd.
Juarez.


[Posted by Maria Rohani]

Three People Connected to U.S. Consulate were Killed

Three people connected to the United States Consulate General in Ciudad Juarez were killed this weekend, highlighting the growing tragedy besetting many communities in Mexico. According to the U.S. Department of State, Lesley Enriquez, an American employee of the consulate who was also four months pregnant was killed along with her husband, Arthur Redelfs, a corrections officer in El Paso, Texas in addition to Jorge Alberto Salcido Ceniceros, the husband of a Mexican employee. The apparently coordinated attacks took place in broad daylight as the three were leaving a consulate children's party.

read more here.

[posted by Maria Rohani]

Monday, April 26, 2010

Iglesia mexicana condena ley de Arizona Tratarlos como delincuentes refleja desprecio

México, 25 de Abril (EFE).- La Archidiócesis de México condenó hoy que se prejuzgue “a cualquier indocumentado como criminal”, dos días después de que el Gobierno de Arizona promulgara una ley que permite que su Policía detenga a cualquier persona si tiene alguna “sospecha razonable” de que es un inmigrante sin papeles.

En un editorial publicado hoy en el semanario Desde la Fe, el arzobispado señaló que con esta forma de actuar se violan las garantías individuales”, “derechos humanos”, la “buena fama” y la “dignidad” de los indocumentados, cualquiera que sea su nacionalidad.

“Considerar como delincuente a todo inmigrante o a todo sospechoso de ser indocumentado refleja una actitud de desprecio al ser humano”, aseguró la archidiócesis, que encabeza el cardenal mexicano Norberto Rivera Carrera.


[posted by: gloria j]

Calderón arremete contra ley en Arizona

MEXICO (AP) ” El presidente de México Felipe Calderón arremetió el lunes contra la recién promulgada ley migratoria enArizona por considerar que abre la puerta a la intolerancia, el odio y la discriminación.

Al encabezar una reunión del Instituto de los Mexicanos en el Exterior (IME), el mandatario aseguró que su gobierno utilizará todos los recursos a su alcance para defender los derechos de los mexicanos y en principio instruyó a la cancillería a redoblar sus acciones protección y entrar en contacto con abogados y expertos jurídicos en la materia.

...Calderón dijo que cualquier ley que criminalice un fenómeno social y económico como la migración "abre la puerta a la intolerancia, al odio, a la discriminación, al abuso en la aplicación de la ley".

Añadió que la legislación también "abre las puertas a una inaceptable discriminación racial" y dijo que aprovechará su viaje en mayo a Washington para elevar ante Obama y legisladores la defensa necesaria de los derechos de los mexicanos en Estados Unidos.

http://www.impre.com/inmigracion/2010/4/26/calderon-arremete-contra-ley-e-185381-1.html

[posted by: gloria j]

Sonoro rechazo mexicano a la SB1070

MÉXICO, D.F.— Legisladores, activistas y la diplomacia en México confían en que la gobernadora del estado de Arizona, Jan Brewer, censure este viernes la ley local que convierte la inmigración sin documentos en delito y da facultades a la policía local para detener a todo sospechoso.

"Hacemos un llamado a la gobernadora del estado de Arizona, Jan Brewer para que ejerza su facultad sobre dicha legislación reconociendo con ello la presencia pacífica y las aportaciones económicas, sociales y culturales de los migrantes mexicanos en su territorio", solicitó la Cámara de Diputados en un punto de acuerdo.

Los congresistas consideraron que la aprobación de esta ley lejos de contribuir a atender el fenómeno de la migración ilegal propicia la formación de conductas xenófobas y represivas que agravan los problemas humanos esenciales de los migrantes.

http://www.impre.com/laopinion/noticias/latinoamerica/2010/4/23/sonoro-rechazo-mexicano-a-la-s-184800-1.html

[posted by: gloria j]

Sunday, April 4, 2010

Update Study Shows Dutch People Afraid to Speak out Against High Costs of Immigration

Wednesday, March 31, 2010, 4:12 PM EDT -

A new study by Dutch social scientist Jan van de Beek shows that many Dutch are worried about the high costs of immigration, but are afraid to speak out.

The study, part of van de Beek's doctoral thesis at the University of Amsterdam, attempted to answer two questions: what kind of economic consequences did mass immigration to the Netherlands between 1960 and 2005 have and why is it such a taboo to study the economic effects of these immigrants.

(full text here)

posted by: Denise Chan

Expansion of Visa Waiver to Greece Could Lead to More Illegal Immigration

Wednesday, March 10, 2010, 10:31 AM EDT - posted on NumbersUSA

President Barack Obama announced yesterday that Greece would join more than 30 other nations that make up the Visa Waiver program - a program that allows citizens of the country to visit the United States for less than 90 days without a visa. Ranking Member of the House Judiciary Committee Lamar Smith, however, believes expanding the program to Greece will increase illegal immigration and threaten national security.

(full text here)


Posted By Denise Chan

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

U.S. must lead in Haiti's recovery - OUR OPINION: Government can do more to aid stricken country



Miami Herald, The (FL) - Monday, March 22, 2010

A s Haiti faces the immense task of recovery, no foreign country will play a more important role in shaping the nation's future than the United States. The U.S. reaction has been generous, and the Obama administration has made a major contribution to Haiti's relief, but it needs to do more.

• Security. U.S. forces have been a key factor in helping Haiti to maintain security during a traumatic period. But even as these efforts help Haiti to get back on its feet, U.S. soldiers are starting to pull out of the country. This sends the wrong signal at the wrong time.

Instead of declaring mission accomplished, the Pentagon should be raising the profile of Army soldiers and Marines in Haiti to guarantee security and reinforce the U.S. commitment.

The 9,000-strong U.N. force known by the acronym MINUSTAH will remain responsible for peacekeeping. But nothing says security to the Haitian people as surely as the sight of U.S. forces, whose distinctive uniforms are well-recognized in the cities and rural areas.

• Immigration. Within days of the January 12 earthquake, the federal government bestowed Temporary Protected Status on Haitian immigrants already here. This was a welcome step, but here, too, there's room for improvement.

Posted By: Ayanna Spikes

http://infoweb.newsbank.com/iw-search/we/InfoWeb?p_action=doc&p_topdoc=1&p_docnum=1&p_sort=YMD_date:D&p_product=AWNB&p_text_direct-0=document_id=%28%2012E9BF63657251A8%20%29&p_docid=12E9BF63657251A8&p_theme=aggdocs&p_queryname=12E9BF63657251A8&f_openurl=yes&p_nbid=N74F58HUMTI3MDA3MjQ1Mi40NjAzNjk6MTo5OjEyOC4zLjAuMA&&p_multi=MIHB

Sunday, March 14, 2010

US authorizes family members of some consulate employees to leave Mexican border towns

US authorizes family members of some consulate employees to leave Mexican border towns


WASHINGTON - The State Department is authorizing U.S. government employees at six U.S. consulates in northern Mexico to send their family members out of the area because of concerns about rising drug-related violence.

The department says the family members are authorized to leave until April 12. The six consulates are in the border cities of Tijuana, Nogales, Ciudad Juarez, Nuevo Laredo, Monterrey and Matamoros.

Read More Here:http://ca.news.yahoo.com/s/capress/100314/world/us_us_mexico_violence

[Posted By Antonio Ramirez and Evelyn Ramirez]

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Mexico's Slim becomes 'world's richest' person


Posted on Wednesday, 03.10.10

Associated Press Writer

Mexican telecom tycoon Carlos Slim is the world's richest person, jumping past Americans Bill Gates and Warren Buffett to become the first person from a developing nation to top the list, according to Forbes magazine.

The rise of Slim, the son of an immigrant shopkeeper who amassed a $53.5 billion fortune and bought a major stake in the New York Times, is part of an increased presence on the list of billionaires from emerging countries, said Forbes' reporter Keren Blankfeld.

Slim's worth surged in the past year as his cell phone holdings rebounded in value. He is the first non-American to top the list since 1994.


Posted By: Ayanna Spikes


http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/03/10/1523253/mexicos-slim-named-worlds-richest.html

Saturday, March 6, 2010

Dutch anti-Islam politician creates stir in UK

Dutch anti-Islam politician creates stir in UK


LONDON - Dutch anti-Islam maverick Geert Wilders took his cinematic assault on the Quran to Britain's House of Lords on Friday, sparking heated debate inside the building and angry protests outside.

The invitation to Parliament, and Wilders' stunning political gains in the Netherlands this week, highlight a growing dichotomy in Europe: concern at the increasing number of Muslims who reject long-cherished liberal values, against the liberal tradition of welcoming the world's unfortunates and embracing multiculturalism.

Wilders screened his 15-minute film "Fitna" to about 60 people, including a half-dozen peers, in a wood-paneled committee room in Parliament. The film associates the Quran with terrorism, homophobia and repression of women.

Outside, about 200 protesters jeered and chanted "Fascist thugs off our streets." Police scuffled with several demonstrators who tried to block a street to prevent a demonstration of pro-Wilders activists from the English Defense League from approaching Parliament.

http://www.philly.com/philly/wires/ap/news/nation_world/86591982.html


[Posted by Ida Micaily]

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

A Fatal Ending for a Family Forced Apart by Immigration Law

They thought of hiding, she says, but chose to follow the rules, accepting the wrenching separation that has become the only path to a legal family life for hundreds of thousands of such couples. Under laws affecting those who married after April 2001, foreign spouses who entered without a visa must leave and seek one from a United States Consulate in their native land.

Their lawyer said that would take two months to a year. Instead, one year turned into three; Mrs. Encalada lost their apartment, and her son was hospitalized for depression at age 8. In July, after she flew to Ecuador for a joint interview at the United States Consulate in Guayaquil, officials there rejected the couple’s application with a form letter saying they had “a marriage of convenience.”

Mrs. Encalada, 32, wrote the White House, the State Department and Congressional offices to plead for help. When most did not respond, she found a new lawyer and started over. But her husband, 28, apparently lost hope. On Dec. 15, facing another Christmas far from his family, he drank poison.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/12/nyregion/12family.html?sq=immigration&st=cse&scp=7&pagewanted=all

[Posted by Yoori Chung]

International International adoption: Saviours or kidnappers?

"Saviours or kidnappers?
Amid catastrophe in Haiti, a new controversy about adoptions"

IT MUST have seemed like a good idea at the time. The New Life Children’s Refuge, a Christian group from Idaho, saw no need to bother with paperwork or official permission when they decided to take 33 Haitian children to the Dominican Republic where they apparently hoped to build an orphanage.

Furious officials arrested ten of the group’s members on charges of kidnapping (which they deny). Many of the children turned out to have families. A similar row erupted in 2007 when workers from Zoé’s Ark, a French charity, were accused of kidnapping 103 children in Chad. Ostensibly orphans from the Darfur region of Sudan, destined for adoption in France, many turned out to be local children, and not orphans. Six charity workers were jailed.

http://www.economist.com/research/articlesBySubject/displaystory.cfm?subjectid=894664&story_id=15469423

[Posted by: Austin Houlgate]

Thursday, February 11, 2010

What have farm workers ever done for me?


[Posted By Maricela Gutierrez]

Tighter license rules hit illegal immigrants

(Updated 11 a.m. EDT, Friday, Aug. 24)  Even where it’s legal, it’s getting tougher for illegal immigrants to get driver’s licenses.

 

The handful of states that issue licenses to illegal immigrants are stepping up efforts to combat fraud and identity theft. That means stricter rules for ensuring immigrants live in-state and are who they say they are.

 

In the last year, North Carolina and Tennessee stopped issuing licenses to illegal immigrants altogether. Meanwhile, New Mexico’s motor vehicle agency enlisted the Mexican government to help the state check the identity of would-be drivers. Maine is working to start limiting licenses to in-state residents, after decades of resisting.

 

Only seven states – HawaiiMaineMichiganNew Mexico,OregonUtah and Washington – allow undocumented immigrants to get driver’s licenses.


http://www.stateline.org/live/details/story?contentId=234828

[Posted by Maricela Gutierrez]

Haiti: TPS and the Coming Negativity

Martha St JeanA New Yorker through and through
Posted: January 18, 2010 11:52 AM

My friends and I worried about the negativity that would emerge when the Department of Homeland Security granted Temporary Protected Status (TPS) to Haitian nationals, allowing them to remain in the U.S for 18 months while conditions at home improve.

Rush Limbaugh's hostile comments regarding aid for Haiti, "Besides, we've already donated to Haiti. It's called the U.S. income tax," I fear are only the tip of the iceberg.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/martha-st-jean/haiti-tps-and-the-coming_b_425579.html

[Posted by: Kimberly Figueroa]

Vows to Move Fast for Haitian Immigrants in U.S.

By JAMES C. McKINLEY Jr.
Published: January 20, 2010

MIAMI — Clutching their passports and well-thumbed documents, hundreds of illegal Haitian immigrants crowded into a Roman Catholic church here on Wednesday to seek help in applying for a program that would allow them to stay and work legally in the United States for 18 months.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/21/us/21immig.html

[Posted by: Kimberly Figueroa]

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Educated immigrants need 10 years to match degrees to jobs; Foreign credentials still not recognized



Edmonton Journal
November 25, 2009

OTTAWA -- Two-thirds of university-educated recent immigrants to Canada are underemployed in jobs requiring no more than a college education or apprenticeship, according to a new Statistics Canada report. Looking at Canada's immigrant labour market in 2008, a report released Monday found that immigrant wages were lower while involuntary part-time work and temporary employment were more common than among Canadian born workers.

Posted By: Ayanna Spikes

Immigrants in Canada: Have Ph.D, must sweep


By Clifford Krauss
Published: Monday, June 6, 2005

VANCOUVER, British Columbia — Gian Sangha wanted to work so badly that he cut his hair and removed his turban for job interviews, even though it compromised his Sikh beliefs. He sent hundreds of resumes. He prayed fervently and finally bought a Buddha statue for good luck.

But Sangha, 55, an environmental scientist from India, could not seem to get a job in Canada, his adopted country, despite a doctorate from Germany, two published books and university teaching experience in the United States.

"Here in Canada, there is a hidden discrimination," Sangha said over cups of Indian tea and spicy pakoras, or fritters, in the dining room of his home in the Vancouver suburb of Surrey.

To scrape by, he once cut lawns. Now he does clerical work and shares his house with his extended family. It was not supposed to be this way in Canada, which years ago put out a welcome mat to professionals from around the developing world.

Posted By: Ayanna Spikes

A waste of brain power: Nationwide, college-educated legal immigrants aren't fulfilling their potential because their credentials aren't recognized



November 11, 2008|Teresa Watanabe, Watanabe is a Times staff writer.As a physician in Peru, Luis Garcia amassed nine years of medical education and five years of practice, including successful appendectomies, Cesarean deliveries and other surgeries. Since he immigrated to Southern California four years ago, he has earned a community college degree specializing in geriatrics.

The only work he's been able to find, however, has been cat-sitting, dog-walking and elder care. That's because Garcia hasn't yet been able to pass the battery of requirements for a U.S. medical license, including several exams and a residency. He represents what a recent report calls a massive "brain waste" of highly educated and skilled immigrant professionals who potentially could, with a little aid, help ease looming labor shortages in California and nationwide in health care, computer sciences and other skilled jobs.

"I feel lost," Garcia said. "Sometimes I'm embarrassed to talk to my family back home and tell them I'm taking care of dogs. But I know someday I will be able to do my geriatrics practice, and I know there are people here who need my help."

Posted By: Ayanna Spikes

Don't waste U.S. brainpower by hiring foreign workers for coveted jobs



Dale Powers - Kissimmee, Fla.

I've heard the arguments in support of using the H-1B, or specialized worker, visas to fill our country's technology positions with foreign employees. Some have said that businesses need to harvest the brainpower from abroad because qualified Americans don't exist and that H-1B visas are the only way to keep the USA competitive in the global economy. But this argument only paints a picture of America as a nation full of idiots.

(Photo -- Against immigration proposal: Protesters in Jackson, Miss., want their U.S. senators not to vote for a bill that would provide a path to citizenship for illegal immigrants who work, pass background checks, stay out of trouble, and pay fines and taxes. / By Brian Albert Broom, The (Jackson, Miss.) Clarion-Ledger, via AP)

The truth is that there are fully qualified American job candidates, such as myself, who are trained right alongside foreign graduate students studying here.

Posted By: Ayanna Spikes

Italy’s African Heroes

By ROBERTO SAVIANO
Published: January 24, 2010

Naples, Italy

WHEN I was a teenager here, kids used to shoot dogs in the head. It was a way of gaining confidence with a gun, of venting your rage on another living creature. Now it seems human beings are used for target practice.

This month, rioting by African immigrants broke out in Rosarno, in southern Italy, after at least one immigrant was shot with an air rifle. The riots were widely portrayed as clashes between immigrants and native Italians, but they were really a revolt against the ’Ndrangheta, the powerful Calabrian mafia. Anyone who seeks to negate or to minimize this motive is not familiar with these places where everything — jobs, wages, housing — is controlled by criminal organizations.

www.nytimes.com/2010/01/25/opinion/25saviano.html?hp


[Posted by Araceli Vazquez]

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Governor looks south of the border for prisons

Governor looks south of the border for prisons
by Wyatt Buchanan

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger said Monday that the state could save $1 billion by building and operating prisons in Mexico to house undocumented felons who are currently imprisoned in California.

The governor floated the idea during an appearance at the Sacramento Press Club in response to a question about controlling state spending. His speech came on the same day that changes in prisoner parole and credits for time served took effect.


Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2010/01/26/MNV11BND6M.DTL#ixzz0dms6Pw7p


[Posted by Melissa Cuen]

Critics Decry Decision to Halt Deportations of Haitian Illegal Immigrants

Updated January 18, 2010
FOXNews.com

The Obama administration's decision to allow illegal immigrants from Haiti to stay in the United States following the devastating earthquake in their home country has prompted complaints among some immigration policy critics that the temporary "time out" will become permanent.

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/01/18/decision-halt-haiti-deportations-decried-door-amnesty/

[Posted by Kimberly Figueroa]

U.S. to fleeing Haitians: You will be sent home

updated 11:37 p.m. PT, Mon., Jan. 18, 2010
MIAMI - U.S. authorities are readying for a potential influx of Haitians seeking to escape their earthquake-wracked nation, even though the policy for migrants remains the same: with few exceptions, they will go back.

So far, fears of a mass migration have yet to materialize. However, conditions in Haiti become more dire each day and U.S. officials don't want to be caught off guard.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/34926383/


[Posted by Kimberly Figueroa]

Monday, January 25, 2010

Mexico Drug War: Asylum Seekers Increasingly Turned Away By US Immigration Courts

By Todd Bensman | GlobalPost

SAN ANTONIO, Texas -- Their stories may be heart-rending. Their experiences may seem unimaginable. Their lives may still be at risk.

But the growing numbers of Mexican citizens who have fled rampaging drug trafficking cartels to seek American political asylum are finding the door slammed shut in their faces.

U.S. immigration judges are expelling Mexican asylum seekers, leaving them to face their cartel demons, according to confidential records provided to GlobalPost and interviews with seven lawyers handling such cases.

Complete Article: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/07/15/mexico-drug-war-asylum-se_n_234022.html

[Posted By: Evelyn Ramirez]

Illegal Immigrants Will Be Allowed to Obtain Driver’s Licenses

Fulfilling a campaign promise, Gov. Eliot Spitzer announced today that residents will be able to apply for state driver’s licenses without regard to immigration status. Applicants for driver’s licenses will no longer be required to provide a Social Security number or show that they are eligible for one. Instead, they will be allowed to provide foreign passports, previous state driver’s licenses and “other valid and verifiable documents” to prove their identity.

Officials in New York estimate that there are tens of thousands of undocumented, unlicensed and uninsured drivers in New York. Mr. Spitzer announced the change along with new security measures that he said would make the licensing system more tamper-proof. Currently, eight other states — Hawaii, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah and Washington — do not require drivers to prove legal status in order to obtain a license, according to the Spitzer administration.

Mr. Spitzer said that expanding access to driver’s licenses would improve traffic safety and lower auto insurance rates. But the move has spurred debate among opponents of illegal immigration, who believe that relaxing licensing standards effectively encourages undocumented immigrants to enter the country.

http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2007/09/21/illegal-immigrants-will-be-allowed-to-obtain-drivers-licenses/

[Posted by Maricela Gutierrez]

FACT SHEET

Why Denying Driver’s Licenses to Undocumented Immigrants Harms Public Safety 

and Makes Our Communities Less Secure 


The question of whether undocumented immigrants should obtain driver’s licenses has been 

hotly debated in almost every state in the country.  But the debate has been a distraction 

from the real issues that states face in promoting public safety and protecting their 

communities.  States need to create practical, workable solutions, and denying undocumented 

immigrants licenses is simply bad public policy.  It increases uninsurance rates and the number of 

unlicensed drivers, and it undermines effective law enforcement. 


Approximately 12 million undocumented immigrants currently live in the U.S.  For the 

most part, these immigrants don’t live alone, but with family members who either are U.S. 

citizens or otherwise authorized to be in the U.S.  For the most part, they also are 

employed, supporting their families and paying U.S. taxes. 


Our immigration system is broken and needs to be fixed, but driver’s license restrictions 

are not the answer.  Immigrants do not come to this country to get a driver’s license, and 

they will not leave because they are ineligible for one.  

Congress must act to pass a comprehensive legalization bill that brings undocumented 

immigrants out of the shadows.  In the meantime, states must pass responsible policies that 

protect everyone’s public safety. 



[Posted by Maricela Gutierrez]

Thursday, January 21, 2010

[After the Earthquake] DISASTER IN HAITI; U.S. stops deporting Haitians; For now, illegal immigrants won't be sent back.

http://proquest.umi.com/pqdweb?did=1938882251&sid=15&Fmt=3&clientId=1566&RQT=309&VName=PQD

an unknown number of other illegal immigrants from Haiti are involved in immigration proceedings that could soon result in deportation orders.

Posted by JungHee, Won

[Before the Earthquake] Haitians Here Illegally Study Rumors for Signs Of Pause in Deportation

http://proquest.umi.com/pqdweb?did=1731312941&sid=11&Fmt=3&clientId=1566&RQT=309&VName=PQD

Barbara Gonzalez, a spokeswoman for United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement, said the government would continue to detain and deport Haitians who violate immigration laws but that under a recently executed agreement with the Haitian government, the American immigration authorities were focusing on those with criminal records.

[Before the Earthquake] Haitians Look for Shift In Immigration Policy

http://proquest.umi.com/pqdweb?did=1652929261&sid=6&Fmt=3&clientId=1566&RQT=309&VName=PQD

For some reason, the link does not get inserted. Please follow the link on the comments

Summary:
Advocates for immigrants said the arrests and deportations have taken a toll on Haitian communities, tearing immigrants -- whose only crime was entering the United States illegally -- from their American spouses and children and condemning them to lives of poverty and violence in a country devastated by political instability and natural disaster. [...] the Haitian government has refused to issue travel documents to deportees, and the United States authorities said they were worried that confusion in Haiti over American policy was causing a surge in the numbers of Haitians trying to flee their country.



Posted by JungHee, Won

[After the Earthquake] U.S. to give Haitians temporary legal status

http://proquest.umi.com/pqdweb?did=1940790451&sid=4&Fmt=3&clientId=1566&RQT=309&VName=PQD

Since the earthquake, the demand for the protected status had been taken up by a swelling chorus of advocates, including Haitian American activists, immigrant rights groups and conservative Cuban American lawmakers in Florida, such as Republican U.S. Rep. Lincoln Diaz-Balart.

Posted by JungHee, Won.

Narco Mexico

Wednesday, January 20, 2010
Mexico Crime Compendium: January 18-20
COMMENT
When a radiographic map of DTO influence is examined (e.g.
http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2009/03/22/us/BORDER.html), it’s
obvious that the Sinaloa DTO remains the number 1 player among
Mexico's drug enterprises. The Sinaloa DTO has become the primary
enemy and target for other DTO’s, but remains suprisingly immune and
relatively untouched by any government initiatives or interventions.
Edgardo Buscaglia’s comments in La Jornada make this argument (http://
www.jornada.unam.mx/2010/01/14/index.php?section=politica&article=012n1pol&partner=rss).
He made similar observations in a detailed interview reported in The
Economist (http://www.economist.com/world/americas/displaystory.cfm?
story_id=15213785) and the same article includes his calculated
estimates that there have been 53, 174 drug related arrests during the
previous 6 years — with only a miniscule 941 (1.7% of the total)
affecting the Sinaloa DTO directly.
Similar argument about the “intocable” Sinaloa DTO are found and
documented throughout Ricardo Ravelo’s book Herencia Maldita
(DeBosillo, 2009).
The fact that El Chapo Guzman has been free for 9 years after his
prison escape (http://www.noroeste.com.mx/publicaciones.php?
id=549284&id_seccion=145&fecha=2010-01-19
) and that Ismael “El Mayo”
Zambada and Ignacio “Nacho” Coronel Villareal remain untouched and
mysteriously anonymous also supports Edgardo Buscaglia’s
interpretation.

[Posted by Professor Montejano]

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Fall of Mexico

Reporting by Philip Caputo; photos by Julian Cardona.

http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200912/mexico-drugs

Foreign Affairs
December 2009

In the almost three years since President Felipe Calderón launched a
war on drug cartels, border towns in Mexico have turned into halls of
mirrors where no one knows who is on which side or what chance remark
could get you murdered. Some 14,000 people have been killed in that
time—the worst carnage since the Mexican Revolution—and part of the
country is effectively under martial law. Is this evidence of a
creeping coup by the military? A war between drug cartels? Between the
president and his opposition? Or just collateral damage from the (U.S.-
supported) war on drugs? Nobody knows: Mexico is where facts, like
people, simply disappear. The stakes for the U.S. are high, especially
as the prospect of a failed state on our southern border begins to
seem all too real.

by Philip Caputo
The Fall of Mexico

FOR THE FULL TEXT:

http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200912/mexico-drugs


[Posted by Professor Montejano]