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Border Death Traps Loom
by
Mary Jo McConahay
May
20, 2003
In
a bustling Mexican town just hours from the site of the recent tractor-trailer
smuggling deaths of 18 undocumented migrants in Victoria, Texas, anxious but
determined Mexicans and Central Americans prepare for the journey north. PNS
writer and editor Mary Jo McConahay says economic forces and politicians
decisions -- not just unscrupulous human smugglers -- ensure future Victorias.
NUEVO
LAREDO, Mexico--In this crowded, bustling town, migrants gather to collect
their strength and make connections that will take them across the watery
border and safely by road - they hope - to work or join family and friends in
the United States. The horrific discovery of a trailer truck filled with dead
and dying undocumented migrants near Victoria, Texas, about four hours north,
is a vivid picture of the risks they face. Yet, even images of blue-gloved
officers picking about for evidence as bodies of the suffocated lay still on
the ground - photos running in newspapers throughout Latin America - are
unlikely to deter the kind of expectant travelers who reach this town. Future
Victorias loom.
"It's
unfair -- the professionals migrate without danger," said 22-year-old Raul
just days before the Victoria incident. A jobless El Salvadoran, Raul said he
traveled for weeks fending off predatory Mexican police and gangs of youths his
own age to reach this crossing point. He was headed for New York, where he
believed an uncle lived. Once he crossed the Rio Grande, Raul figured the hired
coyote -- a human smuggler -- would lead him across the desert until "some
kind of transport" collected him and others for the ride to the central
Houston bus terminal, from which the undocumented fan out across the country.
Coyote cost: $1,500.
Hundreds
of young men wait here nervously every day in sight of the tantalizing
"line," a shallow strip of the Rio Grande or grassy leap from many
points in town, with a gigantic U.S. flag visible flapping widely over the
sister city of Laredo on the other side. To talk to some of them is to hear so
many stories of determination that it's hard to believe another Victoria will
not happen.
"We
can give (our children) a life if we cross," said Antonio, one of three
Honduran fathers taking a break installing windows at a shelter run by Roman
Catholic nuns. An out-of-work sewing machine operator, Antonio knew the dangers
of crossing the border clandestinely, but said factory jobs at home paid just
$15 a week. His new Honduran friends, met on the migrants? trail, nodded in
assent. "He might not recognize me now," said Antonio of a 2-year-old
at home, "but we have slept in the streets and suffered other terrible
things to get this far. When he grows up, he will know what a father
does."
The
packed trailer outside Victoria claimed l8 lives, including a young boy
reportedly found in his father's arms. It was the highest single death toll in
an immigrant smuggling incident in recent memory. Less visible along the Rio
Grande and in the flat, hot desert between here and Victoria is the painfully
regular incidence of individual migrant fatalities, averaging almost one a day
in the last few years according to one attempted counting. Drowning,
dehydration, extreme weakness that draws attacks of wild animals - all are
causes of the deaths noted by researchers at the University of Houston's Center
for Immigration Research.
"For
every body found there is certainly one that isn't," said the center's
co-director, Nestor Rodriguez. Bodies decompose quickly in the water, and the
sun and animals make short work of other remains. In his Houston office
recently, Rodriguez pulled out a file of photos and spread some across his
desk. A middle-aged woman smiled in a hammock on a porch, a teen-age boy mugged
for the camera and a young man held aloft a baby boy. Once word got out that
the center was tracking the nameless border deaths, families sent photos and
descriptions of sons and even mothers gone missing.
With
summer coming, temperatures among the nopal cactus and low scrub bushes will
top 100 degrees. "The desert has the upper hand right now," said
Rodriguez. Yet the factors that push Mexicans and Central Americans north at
the rate of hundreds of thousands a year are not diminishing: the economic
slowdown that costs jobs in the United States echoes in the south, with even
some Mexican border region "maquila" factories cutting their labor
forces; the unfulfilled promise of economic stability at the end of the Central
American wars of the l980s; and decades of more open migration that means
innumerable Mexican and Central American families are now firmly transnational,
their undocumented members moving in and out of the United States at risk.
Since
the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, border enforcement nationwide has been
strengthened. Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge met April 24 in San Diego
with Mexican Interior Minister Santiago Creel to reinforce commitment to a
"Smart Border" utilizing "progressive technology." Migrant
advocates and repeat undocumented migrants here confirm the crossing is
"tighter" than ever. Yet without a new, clear-eyed look at the force
and inevitability of migration from the south, more trailer trucks stuffed with
dead and dying will certainly be found, and more individual desert and river
fatalities will continue to be tabulated in the researchers" border death
watch.
Unscrupulous
human smugglers cannot take all the blame for the serial tragedy taking place
on the U.S. side of the line.
Mary Jo McConahay is a journalist
and filmmaker with long experience in the Americas. Reporting was supported by
the Fund for Investigative Journalism. This article first appeared on the
Pacific News Service website (http://news.pacificnews.org/news/).
She can be contacted at: