http://americas.irc-online.org/am/5713

Americas Policy Program Column Mexico's Immigration Problem Also a "Red
Flag" at Home

Laura Carlsen | December 3, 2008



<http://americas.irc-online.org/am/5713#comments>
   Americas Policy Program, Center for International Policy (CIP)
americas.irc-online.org

*In the first two years of the Felipe Calderon administration, Mexico has
become a focal point in the violation of the human rights of immigrants even
as it criticizes the treatment of Mexican migrants in the United States. The
UN Special Rapporteur on the Human Rights of Migrants Jorge Bustamante
states the problem in no uncertain terms: "We are responsible for violations
of the rights of Central Americans passing through Mexico, the same or worse
as those of Mexicans in the United States." *

The analogy between the treatment of Central Americans by the Mexican
government and Mexicans by the U.S. government is particularly relevant.
President Calderon came to office with two seemingly different challenges:
to find a solution to U.S. treatment of Mexican migrants on the northern
border, and to deal fairly and efficiently with a burgeoning flow of
immigrants and trans-migrants crossing over his southern border.

Neither challenge has been met. The contrast between the mostly rhetorical
defense of Mexican migrants and the violations of migrant rights here
demonstrates not only hypocrisy, but more importantly, the absence of a
coherent rights-based immigration policy that would apply the standards
developed in UN declarations on migrant rights, and other conventions.

Participants in the World Social Forum on Migrations designated Mexico a
"red flag" zone for the violation of migrants' rights. The first reason is
that it is one of the countries that produce the largest number of migrants.
Migrant organizations in the United States accuse the Calderon government of
a lack of results in defending their rights, and a lack of direct dialogue
with the migrants. Calderon's statements that migration is inevitable, they
claim, show a fatalistic resignation to the lack of options at home.

The second reason is the treatment of Central Americans in Mexico. Chiapas
alone receives some 45,000 agricultural migrant workers a year and 200,000
illegal entries. Bustamante reports that migrants are "tortured, robbed, and
extorted" by criminal networks comprised of corrupt members of the armed
forces, police, and government officials. The Salvadorean vice consul
recently affirmed that 17% of Salvadoran migrants had been assaulted when
entering Mexico. Press reports and testimonies reveal the terrible
conditions of overcrowding in migratory stations, extortion by security
forces, and routine violations of rights in raids and return programs. It's
not that the administration has entirely ignored the problem. Undocumented
status was decriminalized. Discourse and training on human rights has
increased within immigration agencies and services have been expanded.
Special programs have been instituted to protect women and child migrants.

But even insiders admit these programs are at best Band-Aids on a
hemorrhaging wound. The reason is the adoption of the security paradigm for
migratory policy. Since the Vicente Fox administration, the U.S. government
has pushed Mexico to control immigration over its southern border as part of
stretching the U.S. security perimeter. Many of these commitments were
hammered out in the context of the Security and Prosperity Partnership, or
SPP, an agreement to extend NAFTA into regional security.

The Merida Initiative, developed in the SPP, will provide tens of millions
of dollars to Mexico's Migration Institute to institutionalize the security
approach to immigration. Although heralded by Calderon as a joint initiative
to fight organized crime, it is officially called a regional cooperation
initiative on counter-terrorism, counter-narcotics, and border security. It
intensifies conflict and aggressions against migrants by attacking "the flow
of illegal goods and persons," as if migrants were contraband or terrorists.


Placing immigration within a security paradigm is what led to the
construction of the wall along the U.S. border and the 5,000 deaths to date
of migrants forced to cross in the most dangerous parts of the border due to
U.S. surveillance and enforcement. Ironically, the emphasis on border
"control" in Mexico has fed organized crime and created booming underground
businesses that prey on immigrants. The UN High Commission for Refugees has
pointed out this relationship, saying, "All smugglers thrive on prohibition,
so stronger borders and tightened visa restrictions have helped push more
people—both refugees and economic migrants—into the arms of the smugglers."

In those arms, women are forced into prostitution, migrants are kidnapped
for the resources they were able to scrape together for the trip, their
families are extorted, and children are forced into slave labor. All these
problems have grown over the past two years, as the Calderon administration
tightened border controls in the South while turning a blind eye to
corruption, and has taken a weak stance on repressive measures in the North.


Illegal immigration is not a problem that will go away as long as it's
considered a problem. The problem is not people looking for work—people will
always look for a way to feed their families and cannot be deterred from
that. It's jobs. The Calderon and Bush governments are spending millions
each year on security forces, monitoring, detention, and deportation of
immigrants. Many keep coming back, not because they're recidivist
lawbreakers, but because they don't have options in their home countries.

Unless Mexico, the United States, and Central American countries form an
effective regional employment strategy that includes a review of trade
polices that lead to displacement, the human rights crisis for immigrants
will continue to go from bad to worse.
*

Laura Carlsen (lcarlsen(a)ciponline.org) is the Mexico City-based director
of the Americas Policy Program (www.americaspolicy.org) of the Center for
International Policy.
*

To reprint this article, please contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] *The
opinions expressed here are the author's and do not necessarily represent
the views of the CIP Americas Policy Program or the Center for International
Policy.*


 For More Information

Resources on Plan Mexico (Merida Initiative)
http://americas.irc-online.org/am/5118

Pain and Protest on the Day of the Butterflies: Violence Persists Against
Women in Mexico
http://americas.irc-online.org/am/5710

The Failure of Operation Chihuahua
http://americas.irc-online.org/am/5626

Expect "Rule of Law" to Rule Immigration Policy
http://americas.irc-online.org/am/5696


-- 
Olga Bautista
So. East Chicago Community for Immigrant Rights
8812 S. Commercial Ave
Chicago, IL 60617
773-410-9050



"of all the forms of inequality, injustice in health care is the most
shocking and inhumane."
-Dr. Martin Luther King

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