Mexico migrants head for Arizona despite crackdown


(Reuters) - Kidnapped by bandits, and caught and repatriated three times by the U.S. Border Patrol, Mexican migrant Roberto Santos says Arizona's tough new immigration law is the least of his worries.

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"I don't care if they tell me they're going to give me life in jail. I'm still going to keep on trying," Santos, 30, said as he sat on a bench outside a migrant welfare project in this bustling city just south of the border from Arizona.

"There's no other option, Mexico's dead -- I just don't want to be here anymore. I don't have a life here anymore," added Santos, who spent more than a decade in Los Angeles, before being recently deported.

Last month, Arizona passed a tough new law to drive 460,000 illegal immigrants out of the desert state, which straddles one of the principal corridors for human and drug smugglers heading up from Mexico.

But despite the looming crackdown -- which will require state and local police to check the immigration status of anyone they reasonably suspect is in the country illegally when it comes into effect in late July -- migrants remain undeterred, authorities on both sides of the border say.

The U.S. Border Patrol's Tucson sector said they had arrested 148,000 people in southern Arizona between October and April, around 8,000 more than in the same period last year.

In Mexico, migrant welfare agency Grupo Beta says staff have continued to attend to some 150 to 200 migrants a day, either headed north from some of Mexico's poorest states in search of work stateside, or sent packing over the border by U.S. authorities who have stepped up deportations.

"People are leaving, others are being repatriated, so I don't see any change," said Enrique Enriquez, the director of Grupo Beta's center, which stands a few blocks south of the rusted border fence in Nogales.

The controversial new law is supported by almost two thirds of Arizona voters, and a majority of American adults.

'NO FOOD IN THE HOUSE'

Opponents charge the measure is unconstitutional and a mandate for racial profiling, and have launched legal challenges and an economic boycott to try to derail it.

Mexican President Felipe Calderon is expected to protest it when he meets with U.S. President Barack Obama in Washington on Wednesday for a state dinner.

In an interview last week he slammed the state measure as "frankly discriminatory, terribly backward." His government issued a warning to Mexicans living in or traveling to Arizona, and asked its consulates there to offer Mexicans legal protection.

Among those particularly motivated to cross north despite the state crackdown are illegal immigrants who used to live in the United States and were swept up in deportations, which reached a record 387,790 last year, according to U.S. Department of Homeland Security figures.

Standing among a group of two dozen migrants in the Mexican border city, Miguel Lopez said he would risk arrest and deportation as many times as was needed to rejoin his wife and two young children in North Carolina.

"We'll just have to see who gets tired first," said Lopez, 31, with a shrug.

"I have to keep trying, because my family is over there. I have nothing in Mexico," he added.

Despite the promise of greater vigilance under the law, some first-time migrants added that they were driven by poverty to seek a better life in the United States, and would push on through Arizona regardless.

"We heard about Arizona's new law on the news, but we need work," said Gerardo Perez, 30, a farmer who said he earned 80 pesos a day -- about $6 -- in his home state of Chiapas in southern Mexico.

"We have to try, there's no food in the house."

(Editing by Sandra Maler)

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