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  1. #1
    Super Moderator Newmexican's Avatar
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    Immigration negotiations with US urged by Mexican legislator

    This is second article down in the link from National Association Of Former Border Patrol Officers printed at Rightside News.

    Immigration negotiations with US urged by Mexican legislator

    The president of the Mexican Chamber of Deputies [House], Francisco Ramirez Acuna, requested the US government to initiate a discussion to pass an immigration reform law since it is a matter of human rights and a campaign commitment to Latin Americans by President Barack Obama. "At this moment in which we are all against the legislation enacted in a state in the US (SB 1070) clear and precise decisions are required," said the legislator. The representative said that since migratory reform is a matter of human rights it should "serve all those who are in the United States from all nations who lack documentation but have a great desire to contribute to that country."
    Since when did Obama made a campaign promise to Latin America for immigration reform or Amnesty for illegals. How many illegals voted in the last election? Migratory Reform is UN speak for wealth redistribution.

    National Association Of Former Border Patrol Officers
    Visit our website: http://www.nafbpo.org
    Foreign News Report

    The National Association of Former Border Patrol Officers (NAFBPO) extracts and condenses the material that follows from Mexican and Central and South American on-line media sources on a daily basis. You are free to disseminate this information, but we request that you credit NAFBPO as being the provider.

    http://www.rightsidenews.com/2010050810 ... order.html
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    NAFBPO article reprint

    Credit:

    National Association Of Former Border Patrol Officers
    Visit our website: http://www.nafbpo.org
    Foreign News Report

    The National Association of Former Border Patrol Officers (NAFBPO) extracts and condenses the material that follows from Mexican and Central and South American on-line media sources on a daily basis. You are free to disseminate this information, but we request that you credit NAFBPO as being the provider.

    Article:

    Travel Alerts Renewed along Mexican Border
    Written by M3 Report
    SATURDAY, 08 MAY 2010 10:11


    El Financiero (Mexico City) 5/6/10

    US renews travel alert to Mexico

    Monterrey, Nuevo Leon - The US Department of State renewed its travel alert today for US residents and consular employees to take utmost precaution on traveling through the border areas of Mexico, due to the violence generated by organized crime. In a communiqué, the US Office of Consular Affairs advised that "US citizens who travel by highways to and from the US border across [the states of] Nuevo Leon, Coahuila, Durango and Sinaloa should take special care."

    Cities pointed out for special precaution included Ciudad Juarez, Tijuana, Chihuahua City, Nogales [Son.], Nuevo Laredo, Piedras Negras, Reynosa, Matamoros and Monterrey. The advisory emphasized that "the situation in the north of Mexico remains unstable, the location and time of future armed confrontations cannot be predicted."

    --

    Immigration negotiations with US urged by Mexican legislator

    The president of the Mexican Chamber of Deputies [House], Francisco Ramirez Acuna, requested the US government to initiate a discussion to pass an immigration reform law since it is a matter of human rights and a campaign commitment to Latin Americans by President Barack Obama. "At this moment in which we are all against the legislation enacted in a state in the US (SB 1070) clear and precise decisions are required," said the legislator. The representative said that since migratory reform is a matter of human rights it should "serve all those who are in the United States from all nations who lack documentation but have a great desire to contribute to that country."

    -------

    El Universal (Mexico City) 5/6/10

    Mexican Navy makes large seizure

    The Mexican Navy seized 80 tons of precursor drugs from a ship from China at the port of Manzanillo, Colima. The drug, phenyl ethyl acetate, was discovered in the interior of three containers on the ship, MSC Norasia Alya, in a joint operation carried out by the Navy and the federal Department of Justice (PGR). The drug can be used for the manufacture of synthetic drugs such as "crack," "cristal," and "ecstasy,"

    -------

    Frontera (Tijuana, Baja California) 5/6/10

    Police laid off in Nuevo Leon for lack of trust

    The counsel for Public Security in the state of Nuevo Leon reported that a total of 166 state police have been fired for being considered untrustworthy during the present state administration. The head of Public Security said that they prefer a smaller police force of good officers rather than a large department that leaves doubts as to their activities.

    -------

    El Debate (Sinaloa) 5/6/10

    [Commentary: ] To the "rescue "of immigrants

    Good are the intentions that move our representatives in the state congress to grant necessary aid to our countrymen who suffer scorn in Arizona, US, and are beginning to be deported to Mexico. The controversial law SB 1070 made by the governor of Arizona, Jan Brewer, has rocked the government of Mexico, which is seeking, by diplomatic means, the respect of our countrymen who are being treated like criminals for the fact of not having documentation permitting them to work in that part of the US.

    By Sinaloa being one of the principal neighbors of the US, Arizona has around 30,000 Sinaloans who face an uncertain future with this new law. This moves the government of Sinaloa and its representatives to seek formulas to rescue our countrymen who are returning to their places of origin. The representatives propose that the state government create programs that permit restoring those deported to productive activities.

    On first sight, this seems perfect, but in practice, we think it will be difficult to be able to realize these ideas if we take into account that the opportunities in Sinaloa don't provide for any more. There are no job opportunities and this is seen daily among thousands of people who continue hoping for an opportunity that still has not arrived. The legislators are very aware of the situation that impedes the immigrants. A thorough rescue is not possible and, even less to promise them work without generating the necessary jobs.

    We must remember that our countrymen emigrated precisely because of the lack of opportunities in their homeland, opportunities that now the government can hardly give them. The intention, honorable representatives, is very good, but the reality, unfortunately, is another matter.

    -------

    National Association Of Former Border Patrol Officers
    Visit our website: http://www.nafbpo.org
    Foreign News Report

    The National Association of Former Border Patrol Officers (NAFBPO) extracts and condenses the material that follows from Mexican and Central and South American on-line media sources on a daily basis. You are free to disseminate this information, but we request that you credit NAFBPO as being the provider.
    Suppose you were an idiot and suppose you were a member of Congress. But I repeat myself.

  3. #3
    Super Moderator Newmexican's Avatar
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    Thank you MarkB for posting.

    I have been impressed by the Former Border Partols Foreign report. This article from Equidor, translated on their website is very interesting also. I found it very enlightening.

    NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF FORMER BORDER PATROL OFFICERS
    Visit our website: http://www.nafbpo.org
    Foreign News Report

    The National Association of Former Border Patrol Officers (NAFBPO) extracts and condenses the material that follows from Mexican and Central and South American on-line media sources on a daily basis. You are free to disseminate this information, but we request that you credit NAFBPO as being the provider.

    [b]A bucket of bias: op/col by Rodrigo Santillan Peralbo, titled: “Criminalsâ€
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  4. #4
    Senior Member bigtex's Avatar
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    Speaking of human rights violations...........seems Mexico has a lot of them might like to worry about before they start getting into our politics.


    A Mexican Navy soldier uses a baton to hit a Central American migrant near the town of Las Palmas in southern Mexico. According to human rights and migrant groups, Central American migrants who cross Mexico trying to reach the U.S. are often abused.

    Mexico cracks down on illegal Central American immigrants
    By OLGA R. RODRIGUEZ Associated Press
    April 13, 2008, 10:12AM


    ARRIAGA, Mexico — For thousands of illegal immigrants from Central America, the long journey to the U.S. starts here, on the groaning back of a freight train they call The Beast.

    But these days many don't get too far.

    Central Americans without documents now face increased security within Mexico, including checks on the train for stowaways. It's also harder for them to head north once they cross into Mexico because of hurricane damage to the train tracks.

    The result: The number of non-Mexican migrants stopped by the U.S. Border Patrol has dropped almost 60 percent from 2005, despite increased detention efforts. About 68,000 non-Mexican migrants — mostly Central Americans — were detained last year, compared to 165,000 in 2005. Non-Mexicans make up about 10 percent of all migrants caught by Border Patrol officers.

    Mexico itself also is seeing fewer illegal immigrants — 120,000 were arrested last year, a 50 percent drop from 2005, when Hurricane Stan hit and destroyed the railroad, according to the National Immigration Institute. Since President Felipe Calderon took office two years ago, Mexico has added more soldiers and federal police on its border with Guatemala and more immigration and military checkpoints thoughout the south.

    Despite its efforts to secure its own southern border, Mexico does not try to stop its own citizens from crossing north illegally into the United States, beyond pursuing drug and people smugglers. By law, Mexico notes, Mexicans can go wherever they want within the country, including the border. They don't break any laws until they are on U.S. soil.

    Many Mexicans also are sympathetic to illegal immigrants from Central America, but the issue still causes some tensions that echo the U.S. debate. Isaac Castillo, owner of the Hotel La Posada in Arriaga, argues that Central American immigrants often end up working in Mexico, where wages can be double the few dollars a day they might earn at home.

    "The problem isn't just in the U.S., but in Mexico, because a lot of Central Americans want to stay here and compete with Mexicans for jobs," he said.

    The crackdown on Central American migrants has left them searching for new routes. Some pay smugglers $7,000 to go by boat into southern Mexico, then hide in tractor-trailers heading north.

    These boats and trucks try to evade highway checkpoints set up every few miles alongside most of Mexico's southern roadways. But migrants have been crushed to death when false floors collapsed under the weight of freight, and 22 Salvadoran migrants drowned in an October shipwreck off the coast of southern Oaxaca state.

    For those Central American migrants unable or unwilling to risk the sea, a cargo train — The Beast — remains the only option for the 2,000-mile trip to the U.S.

    The long trek begins at the Suchiate river, on the border with Guatemala, where for $1 they cross on makeshift rafts into sweltering jungles.

    Then they hike along the destroyed, sun-scorched train tracks to Arriaga for up to nine days. Arriaga, 200 miles from the Guatemalan border, is the closest place to hop a train since Hurricane Stan destroyed the Chiapas-Mayab line.

    As they head north, they pay off thieves, immigration officials, police and railroad employees.

    Juan Gabriel Ramos, a Guatemalan 17-year-old trying to join his mother in California, said he bribed a Mexican federal police officer and an immigration agent before even making it to Arriaga.

    "They both told me that if I didn't give them money they would send me back to Guatemala," Ramos said.

    When they're caught, migrants say they're often abused by Mexican authorities. In one notorious case last year in the northern city of Saltillo, migrants complained to the National Human Rights Commission of rectal exams done by immigration officials who said they were checking for cholera.

    "The mistreatment of migrants here is brutal, and no one does anything about it because everyone sees them as booty," said Heyman Vasquez, a Roman Catholic priest. He estimated 80 percent of migrants are robbed before they arrive at his two-room shelter in Arriaga.


    The slowdown in immigrant traffic is notable in Arriaga, a town of corn and sorghum farmers. Only a few clusters of Central American men and women linger around the mostly abandoned, graffiti-covered train station, where they wait for the first train they can grab. Many stay at a local migrant shelter, watching television or sharing stories of abuse.

    Sitting on a cracked sidewalk outside the shelter, one Nicaraguan man told of the time he saw a group of criminals gang-rape a woman and shoot her boyfriend. A Honduran couple talked of fleeing their country after gang members killed their teenage daughter, and leaving their seven children, ages 18 to 1, in hiding.

    It doesn't get any easier once immigrants hop a train. They must often bribe private guards and police stationed along the tracks. Many stowaways are too tired to hold on to the train and fall, losing limbs.

    The trip itself can be deadly.

    Jorge Guevara, a 21-year-old Salvadoran, said he first rode the train to the U.S.-Mexico border in 2001 and saw 20 people crushed, and probably killed, when cars derailed. He fled and never found out what happened.

    "That accident left me in shock, but I kept going," Guevara said to a group of first-time migrants, listening intently. "One doesn't think about the danger, only about getting to the United States. Once I'm there, I'll think about it."

    Guevara said he drove a forklift in Dallas until he was pulled over for a burned-out taillight and deported last year.

    It took Milagros Rivera and her family a month to reach Ixtepec, just 85 miles north of Arriaga. By then, the 36-year-old from El Salvador said they had been robbed three times.

    The first time was at the river crossing into Mexico. Soldiers demanded money before allowing her, her boyfriend, her 20-year-old son and her 18-year-old daughter-in-law to continue on.

    About 50 miles later, gunmen held them up along the tracks, forced them to strip naked and took about $1,500 they had saved, Rivera said.


    "It was a terrible moment because they took my daughter-in-law away, and we thought they were going to rape her," said Rivera.

    The thieves ended up freeing the girl unharmed. But then they were robbed by a local police officer of the $40 they had collected begging on the streets.

    Rivera said she is bound for Virginia, where friends have promised to help her find work.

    "There is a lot of suffering," she said. "But the hope of reaching your destination helps you to keep going."

    http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/front/5696920.html[/img]
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  5. #5

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    MEXICO'S SOLUTION

    Oh God do not get me started on Mexico's double standard. Here is an incredible article on the PC540.blogspot.com

    Credit Reprint from an article published in the Washington Times on 4/4/06 by Frank J. Gaffney, Jr. titled "THE MEXICAN SOLUTION." The United States should grow up and learn how a real nation defends itself from foreign invaders:

    http://pc540.blogspot.com/2006/04/how-d ... legal.html

    THURSDAY, APRIL 06, 2006

    How does Mexico deal with Illegal Immigration?

    Rush brought this up on his show today(Thursday). I told you about it on-air Monday morning!

    * published in the Washington Times on 4/4/06

    THE MEXICAN SOLUTION

    By Frank J. Gaffney, Jr.

    The Congress has received lots of free advice lately from Mexican government officials and illegal aliens waving Mexico’s flag in mass demonstrations coast-to-coast. Most of it takes the form of bitter complaints about our actual or prospective treatment of immigrants from that country who have gotten into this one illegally – or who aspire to do so.

    If you think these critics are mad about U.S. immigration policy now, imagine how upset they would be if we adopted an approach far more radical than the bill they rail against which was adopted last year by the House of Representatives – namely, the way Mexico treats illegal aliens.

    In fact, as a just-published paper by the Center for Security Policy’s J. Michael Waller www.centerforsecuritypolicy.org/Mexicos_Glass_House.pdf
    points out, under a constitution first adopted in 1917 and subsequently amended, Mexico deals harshly not only with illegal immigrants. It treats even legal immigrants, naturalized citizens and foreign investors in ways that would, by the standards of those who carp about U.S. immigration policy, have to be called “racistâ€
    Suppose you were an idiot and suppose you were a member of Congress. But I repeat myself.

  6. #6
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    From: We The People of The United States

    To mexihole:

    Re: Immigration reform

    Recall all your citizens. We no longer need them nor want to support them any longer.

    That is all....
    Detect, Detain, and Deport - The 3-D method of choice!!

  7. #7

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    Since when does a candidate for US President campaign in Latin America and make "campaign promises" to non citizens?

    Latin American countries which are so corrupt that they cannot create viable economies are the ones violating their citizens' human rights.
    Take a stand or all there will be left to do is to ask the last person in the country we once called America to lower the flag one last time.

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