Illegal Mexican Immigrant Influx Angers Many in US
Border State 

By  Greg Flakus 
VOA NEWS
Sells, Arizona
18 April 2005

The recent arrival of some 700 citizen volunteers on
the Arizona border with Mexico has drawn attention to
the problem of illegal immigration on the border.
While many Americans express sympathy for poor
immigrants seeking honest work in this country, many
citizens are also angered by the damage immigrant
crossers have done to pristine desert areas. 

The civilian volunteers, who call themselves
Minutemen, have come to watch the border and report
illegal crossings to the Border Patrol. They have
plenty of critics in Arizona, but along the border
they enjoy general support among landowners and
residents who blame illegal aliens for a rise in
violent crime as well as damage to property and the
environment. One local man drove out to greet the
Minutemen the other day and thanked them.

"The main reason I am glad these guys are out here is
because the bottom line is it is illegal," he said.
"That is the bottom line. In the last five years that
we have lived here I have seen it triple, in numbers
of people coming across. It is illegal to do what they
are doing, they are trashing this place."

The trash left by immigrants includes discarded
clothing, plastic bottles, food wrappers and plastic
bags, which can be seen flapping in the breeze on
trees and shrubs all over the desert. Ranchers accuse
the immigrants of knocking down fences, breaking water
pipes and damaging other infrastructure. 

About 300 kilometers to the west of where the
Minutemen are staging their month-long border watch,
immigrants continue to flow across the border into
military reserves, national park land, and an Indian
reservation.

Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument Superintendent
Kathy Billings says the thousands of immigrants who
pass over the border into this federally protected
natural area each year have a devastating effect on
cactus like the Organ Pipe and Saguaro.

"The undocumented immigrants, when they are laying up
during the day to escape the heat, will camp
underneath these trees and then there is a lot of soil
compaction," said Billings. "They will tear branches
off to put more shade around them, thereby destroying
the nurse tree that protects the saguaros." 

She says the National Park Service, in cooperation
with the Border Patrol and other agencies is trying to
prevent further damage, but the flow of illegal
migrants remains strong.

"There are many areas that are highly impacted by the
trails and by the places where the people camp and
just leave their trash and human waste," continued Ms.
Billings. "There is a spider web of trails through the
park that have been created by that illegal activity,
but there is still a large part of the monument that
is still very pristine."

The illegal border crossers traversing the National
Monument include drug smugglers and criminals, too. 

In 2002, two fugitives from justice in Mexico killed a
Park ranger here. Such incidents have scared some
tourists away. 

Cross-border criminal activity has also had an impact
on the nearby lands of the Tohono O'Odham Indian
reservation.

The police chief of the reservation, Richard Saunders,
says the environmental damage being done by illegal
immigrants distresses his people, who have a great
reverence for the land. He says tribal officials have
worked in vain to keep their lands clean of the trash
left by undocumented immigrants.

"As soon as you clean up an area, there are people
coming back through it the next day, discarding trash
and articles all over again," said Mr. Saunders. "So,
it is a constant battle there."

Police Chief Saunders says the Tohono O'Odham people
have always welcomed strangers and tried to help
travelers in the desert, but, he says, they cannot
cope with the numbers of people coming over the border
from Mexico.

"It is a harsh environment out here and so, with that,
there is the importance of giving and to assist there.
We have always been a giving people," he said.
"However, with these large numbers coming through on
an annual basis, it is overwhelming to the Tohono
O'Odham people."

Immigrant advocates say the blame for this situation
rests with the U.S. government for failing to provide
workers a safe and legal way to come into the country
to do jobs most Americans will not do.

Jennifer Allen of the Border Action Network says
current policies ignore economic reality.

"We have a false economy in this country that is
incredibly dependent on undocumented labor," explained
Ms. Allen. "There was just a call put out by the Yuma,
Arizona Grower's Association to the Border Patrol to
back off at some of their checkpoints in western
Arizona because they could not get enough lettuce
pickers to come in and harvest the crop."

But many people here say state and local governments
are paying the price for the cheap immigrant labor
some industries exploit in health care, education, and
other social services. Last year, voters in Arizona
overwhelmingly approved Proposition 200, which bans
state services for illegal residents. There are now 18
more bills before the state legislature that would
strengthen that measure.




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