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» Migrantes
en México: la retórica contra la realidad /
Julio 2, 2006
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Migrantes
centroamericanos se refugian del sol en Tultitlán
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FOTO: Alfredo Pelcastre/Mondaphoto (más
en www.mondaphoto.com) |
ULTITLAN,
Mexico -- The shanty's two walls are built with flattened 50-gallon
steel drums. A dirty orange tarp serves as the roof, sheltering
a group of young men from the scorching summer sun. The floor is
dirt. The furniture is a discarded mattress, covered by a sheet
of electric-blue bubble wrap whose bubbles have all burst. Hoping
for a scrap of food, an old dog with a white eye mills among hungry
people.
The
shack sits some 6 feet from the closest of four northbound railroad
tracks that are the reason the men are here. These rail yards outside
Mexico City are a major hub for freight trains connecting the capital
with the country's south and north. As such, they are a stopover
for Central American migrants riding trains across Mexico to reach
the U.S.
The
journey is extremely dangerous and the stories these seven men tell
highlight the perils faced by the hundreds of Guatemalans, Hondurans,
Salvadorans and others who begin the trip every day. Since they
entered Mexico at the southern state of Chiapas a few days ago,
the men say they have seen or experienced just about everything:
Some have been beaten, forced to pay bribes, robbed by law enforcement
officers, ripped off by shopkeepers and bus drivers, cheated by
smugglers, ambushed and mugged by gun-toting bandits.
Omar
Morales, 31, a Honduran peasant on his way to meet relatives in
New Jersey and New York City, says he was held at gunpoint and forced
to lie naked on the ground while a woman traveling in his group
was raped by a man who also robbed them.
"They
rip your clothes until they find what they want," says Morales,
the eldest in this group. "They hit me in the head with a shotgun."
hile
the Mexican government demands respect for the human rights of its
undocumented countrymen inside the U.S., an uncomfortable double-standard
appears to be unfolding within its own borders: Many Central American
migrants traversing the country are victims of violence and abuse,
according to activists and public officials.
Although
outgoing President Vicente Fox's administration has launched several
initiatives to help the migrants, experts say those measures have
been inadequate. The issue rarely was mentioned in the campaign
leading to today's presidential elections.
"There
is an incongruity between a foreign policy that is very active in
the defense of Mexican migrants' human rights abroad ... and an
interior policy aimed towards the detention of migrants that stands
far from guaranteeing the exercise of human rights," says Karina
Arias, a spokeswoman for Sin Fronteras (Without Borders), a human
rights organization in Mexico City.
"There
are major problems in terms of violence against (Central American)
migrants," says Daniel Wilkinson, deputy director for the Americas
at Human Rights Watch in New York. "It's a population very
vulnerable to extortion, violent crime, sexual exploitation, corruption,
because they are people who are trying to avoid authority."
NUMBERS
INCREASING
lthough
Mexico's southern border has seen heightened enforcement, the migratory
flow keeps rising, officials say. There are no statistics on how
many people attempt the trip, but Mexico's National Institute of
Migration provides figures of those detained for lack of documentation:
The 240,000-plus detained in 2005 represented a 74 percent increase
since 2001.
There
are no comprehensive numbers for the cases of abuse either, but
an increasing flow means more potential victims.
"Violations
(against migrants) are committed all over the national territory,"
says Mauricio Farah, the top official for migration issues at the
National Commission on Human Rights, an independent federal agency.
Under
the tarp, the travelers talk about a raid they escaped in the southern
state of Veracruz two days earlier. As the train they rode was stopping,
they say, Migration and police officers surrounded it. They estimate
only 20 people out of several hundred got away and made it to Tultitlan.
Esteban Perez, 29, a Salvadoran who was in that train, shows the
pink flesh of an open wound above his left eye. An officer in the
raid, he says with an angry scowl, "tried to hit me in the
chest with his gun."
The
men complain of policemen who extort them under the threat of handing
them over to Migration officers (only the latter are allowed to
detain undocumented migrants.)
"If
(the police) detain you, it's because they want money," says
Honduran Oscar Orlando, 24. The migrants also say bus drivers usually
overcharge them knowing they won't call the police. "One charged
me 200 pesos instead of 10 (about $1)," says Wilmer Pereira,
21, another Honduran, whose thick eyebrows spend most of the time
in a frown.
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Un
migrante corre para subirse al tren que va al norte
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FOTO: Carlos Aranda/Mondaphoto (más
en www.mondaphoto.com) |
Morales,
the peasant, says some of the coyotes who carry migrants in vans
promise to circumvent Migration checkpoints. "After you give
them the money," he says, "they signal with their headlights
and the checkpoint stops them."
'ADMINISTERING
THE FLOW'
ast
April, a young Mexican man from Tultitlan was shot to death some
300 yards from this spot, when a Migration officer mistook him for
an undocumented immigrant.
Residents
rioted and destroyed two patrol pickup trucks. "We don't let
(migration officers) in here any more," says Janette Velazco
Sanchez, 17, a friend of the dead man who sells food to migrants
from a small wooden shack by the tracks.
The
Fox administration has taken measures to improve the treatment of
migrants, says Hermenegildo Castro, a National Institute of Migration
spokesman. (Requests for interviews with senior Migration and Foreign
Relations officials were denied.)
Castro
mentions the construction of better detention stations for undocumented
migrants, 400 new INM officers hired in the past two years, 185
dismissed since 2001 for human rights violations or "a loss
of confidence in them," and faster deportations after detention.
Mexico also has launched regularization programs for undocumented
foreigners who have been in the country two years and are married
to a citizen or employed, he says.
Castro
acknowledges, however, that stopping the migration is not feasible.
"It's more a question of administering the flow," he says.
Experts
say the government's measures were clearly not enough.
"The
intention of respecting human rights is in the official discourse,"
says Professor Manuel Angel Castillo of the Colegio de Mexico. "The
problem is putting that in practice." But Castillo says the
cause for the abuses "is not that there is intention on the
part of the state. There is an inability to intervene on the part
of the state."
Professor
Hugo Angeles Cruz of the College of the South Border in Tapachula
says Fox did pay attention to the issue, but "violations are
in the same status they were at the start of (his) term."
PROMISES
OF REFORM
he
migrants' plight was not a campaign issue. But foreign policy representatives
of leading presidential candidates vow to address the problem.
Arturo
Sarukhan, of the governing National Action Party, says the situation
is first a human rights matter, but also a strategic need for Mexico.
"It's a gap of enormous vulnerability, in political terms and
in terms of image," he says. Talia Vazquez Alatorre, of the
leftist Democratic Revolution Party, says, "American (immigration)
legislation is more up-to-date than the Mexican one. How sad."
Most
of those interviewed agree the General Population Act, which has
governed immigration to Mexico since 1974, needs a comprehensive
update. The law -- it makes undocumented entry a crime punishable
by up to two years in prison -- is harsher than bills being discussed
in Washington.
In
Tultitlan, the afternoon heat is punctuated by the buzz of flies.
A red engine chugs back and forth as cars are hitched to it. It's
the 3 o'clock to San Luis Potosi, some 250 miles north.
The
men approach the now still train and stand or squat close to it
in silent tension, like sprinters waiting for the gun. Finally,
the convoy jerks forward and starts to speed up. Salvadoran Byron
Alas, 29, runs three, four steps and jumps and clings from a ladder.
The others quickly follow. Soon they all pick spots at the ends
of two cars that look like Dumpsters on wheels.
Morales
climbs on top of one car. He is making the trip because he can't
support his wife and three kids raising corn and beans. "One
of them says she wants to get a B.A.," he has said earlier,
adding a proud smile.
"You
know there are dangers: robbers, accidents on the train, the police.
Anyway, you have to take the risk, to see if you can earn something."
Artículo: © 2006 The Star Ledger.
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