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  1. #1
    Senior Member FedUpinFarmersBranch's Avatar
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    TX-Reporter, son seek asylum

    Reporter, son seek asylum
    By Daniel Borunda / El Paso Times
    Article Launched: 07/27/2008 12:00:00 AM MDT


    EL PASO -- Emilio Gutiérrez Soto only had time to take his teenage son, a few clothes and memories of 25 years as a newspaper reporter when he fled his native Mexico last month, fearing for his life.

    Gutiérrez, of the small town of Ascension, Chihuahua, is among the more than 60 Mexican citizens who have asked for political asylum at border crossings in the El Paso region since October, spurred in part by a raging drug cartel war.

    "I have no desire to return to Mexico. It would mean death," Gutiérrez, 45, said in a recent telephone interview from an immigration detention center in El Paso.

    Gutiérrez is awaiting a hearing, which may not come until December. He asked for asylum June 16 at the border crossing at Antelope Wells in the Bootheel of New Mexico.

    "The decision to come here (the U.S.) was because of the terror. An attempt to save the life of my son. He's my only hope," Gutiérrez said in Spanish. His 15-year-old son is being held at a juvenile detention center.

    Gutiérrez, who wrote for El Diario del Noroeste, claims that Mexican army officials targeted him for death after he wrote about allegations of crimes committed by soldiers in communities in the rural northwestern part of Chihuahua state.

    Gutierréz's plea comes at a time when international press freedom organizations have labeled Mexico as the deadliest country in the Americas for journalists.

    Last month, the Committee to Protect Journalists issued a report stating that 21 journalists have been


    killed in Mexico since 2000. Seven were killed in reprisal for their work. Seven others have been missing since 2005. The committee ranks the danger level in Mexico with that in such war zones as Iraq, Somalia and Sierra Leone.
    Being a reporter in Mexico is "fine for those that cover sociales (the social scene) and entertainment. There is not much difference between politics and police news. It's the same garbage," said Gutiérrez, a Nuevo Casas Grandes native who has worked for several newspapers in Chihuahua.

    The troubles for Gutiérrez began in 2005 when he reported allegations that soldiers had been involved in crimes, including a hotel robbery in Palomas, stated a detailed 12-page handwritten account by Gutiérrez.

    Gutiérrez was confronted by army officers angered over his articles. "So you are the son of a whore who has been disparaging us," an army major reportedly told Gutiérrez.

    The major asked Gutiérrez why he didn't report on the narcotraffickers in town. Gutiérrez responded that he didn't know who the traffickers were and that he was afraid of them.

    "You should be afraid of us," the major warned before reportedly telling Gutiérrez not to write any more stories.

    Two days later, an article on the confrontation was reported in the newspaper. Problems escalated. Gutiérrez said that he filed a complaint with Mexico's National Commission on Human Rights but that nothing was solved.

    On May 5, soldiers raided and searched Gutiérrez' home after supposedly getting an anonymous tip about drugs and weapons. The raid, which turned up nothing, was also reported in the newspaper.

    Gutiérrez began to noticed he was being followed and watched, his account stated.

    "I would hardly sleep at my home. I would sleep at the office or at friends' homes. I was in a state of stress," he said.

    On June 15, a friend told Gutiérrez that he should leave because the military was going to kill him.

    "The sensation I had was cold. ... When they told me, I didn't doubt it for an instance," Gutiérrez said. "My mind went blank. What will I do? What will happen?"

    He and his son hid out at a friend's ranch before heading to the U.S. border the next day, praying not to run into a military checkpoint. "At the border, they asked me what I had with me. I told them, 'Fear,' " Gutiérrez said.

    The international press freedom group Reporters Without Borders has urged the Mexican federal government to open an investigation into the army and has urged U.S. authorities to give Gutierrez permission to stay in this country.

    The Mexican Embassy in Washington, D.C., did not immediately return a call for comment Friday. In recent years, Mexico has strengthened laws to protect journalists.

    The press in Mexico has historically not been immune to corruption, including reporters paid bribes for coverage. It is also rumored that drug cartels have associates at publications to ensure that some things are not reported.

    Maria Elena Upson, spokeswoman for the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service, said that anyone can file for asylum but that the burden of proof is on the applicant. Refugees must prove they would be persecuted in their country because of their race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion.
    "The basic problem is the U.S. won't denounce it (persecution) because Mexico is an ally and they won't admit the level of corruption and persecution that exists," said immigration lawyer Carlos Spector, who is representing Gutiérrez.

    Spector said he felt the number of Mexicans seeking political asylum -- with claims that their government won't protect them -- would continue to grow as they flee the violent-crime wave that has left more than 600 dead this year alone in Juárez.

    But because asylum seekers are held in detention centers until their cases are heard, many simply give up their claims, Spector said.

    "I think the situation in Mexico has deteriorated so much, the police forces are so infiltrated and corrupt that chaos has ensued," Spector said. "Criminals are acting with impunity."

    Daniel Borunda may be reached at dborunda@elpasotimes.com; 546-6102.






    'Difficult situation'
    The international press freedom organization Reporters Without Borders (Reporters Sans Frontieres) rates Mexico as having a "difficult situation" for journalists, the same as Colombia. In the Americas, only Cuba has a worst rating with a "very serious situation."
    Press cases in Juárez highlighted by Reporters Without Borders this year:

    Jan. 30: Crime reporter Carlos Huerta of the Norte de Ciudad Juárez newspaper fled Mexico after getting death threats from a drug cartel. The Norte reduced its coverage of drug trafficking.

    June 23: Candelario Perez Perez, 32, who sold used cars and had worked as an editor on his father's crime magazine, Sucesos, is gunned down after getting into an argument at a bar. Sucesos was published irregularly and had not appeared in the last two months.
    Source: Reporters Without Borders. For more information, www.rsf.org

    Sounds hard to do .
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  2. #2
    Senior Member miguelina's Avatar
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    Why don't they seek asylum in Guatemala instead? I am assuming this guy could have flown out of Mexicio and to another country? Why didn't he? We can't take any more here, there are way too many already.
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    Quote Originally Posted by miguelina
    Why don't they seek asylum in Guatemala instead? I am assuming this guy could have flown out of Mexicio and to another country? Why didn't he? We can't take any more here, there are way too many already.
    Good point M! Why not Guatemala, Brazil, Chile, or a host of other South American countries to choose from! Why always this country! I suspect it's because those other mentiond countries do not have the generous financial/social assistance these people find so attractive in our country.
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  4. #4
    Senior Member millere's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by NoBueno
    Good point M! Why not Guatemala, Brazil, Chile, or a host of other South American countries to choose from! Why always this country! I suspect it's because those other mentiond countries do not have the generous financial/social assistance these people find so attractive in our country.
    Their military and police cooperative more closely in enforcing illegal immigration laws; in the US we are cursed with a bunch of oily politicians like Newsum, Hillary, Bush (and hundreds more!) who have become too corrupt to enforce the law because it doesn't fit their underground, Liberal driven "La Raza" agenda.

  5. #5
    Senior Member vmonkey56's Avatar
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    NO, DO NOT LET THESE PEOPLE INTO AMERICA
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  6. #6
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    At least in Spanish-speaking countries he could probably continue his career. What is he going to do here, especially if his English isn't fluent enough to be a reporter? Live off the public dole. Oh, I forgot about the profusion of Spanish newspapers.
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  7. #7
    Senior Member USPatriot's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by miguelina
    Why don't they seek asylum in Guatemala instead? I am assuming this guy could have flown out of Mexicio and to another country? Why didn't he? We can't take any more here, there are way too many already.
    I was about to write the same thing but we already know the answer.

    I hope Immigration will ask them what other country they would like to go to since we are already overwhelmed with Mexico's IA's .I would guess more & more Mexicans will be asking for asylum as the violence grows.

    Go somewhere else we have no more room at the inn,we are full up and overflowing.
    "A Government big enough to give you everything you want,is strong enough to take everything you have"* Thomas Jefferson

  8. #8
    Senior Member butterbean's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by miguelina
    Why don't they seek asylum in Guatemala instead? I am assuming this guy could have flown out of Mexicio and to another country? Why didn't he? We can't take any more here, there are way too many already.
    I agree. Why come here? Those countries already speak Spanish too. And the culture of those countries is very close, so they really dont need to blend in, assimilate or learn English.
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