Mexican Senate decriminalizes illegal entry into Mexico
NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION OF FORMER BORDER PATROL OFFICERS
Visit
our website:
http://www.nafbpo.org
Sign up for our report at:
m3report@yahoo.com
Foreign News
Report
The
National Association of Former Border Patrol Officers (NAFBPO) extracts and
condenses the material that follows from Mexican and Central and South American
on-line media sources on a daily basis. You are free to disseminate this
information, but we request that you credit NAFBPO as being the provider.
Posted on the American Patrol Report on April 30, 2008
Mexican Senate decriminalizes illegal entry into Mexico
El Diario (Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua) 4/29/08
The Senate of Mexico voted unanimously yesterday (Monday) to de-criminalize the illegal entry of aliens into Mexico by exchanging the present jail term sanctions for "administrative" ones, meaning fines ranging from the equivalent of twenty up to five hundred days of the minimum daily wages prevalent in the Distrito Federal. However, the Senate bill as passed also has different components dealing with sanctions relating to aliens who re-enter Mexico after deportation, or who enter into marriages of convenience with Mexican citizens for the sole purpose of allowing those aliens to reside in Mexico, or regarding aliens who violate their status while in Mexico. These provisions differ from the bill to de-criminalize the illegal entry of aliens into Mexico as passed by the Chamber of Deputies (read: House of Representatives) last year. The Senate bill approval therefore did not become law and was returned to the Chamber of Deputies to iron out the differences with its own version.
Without name attribution, the article states that the federal senators and deputies agreed that "keeping the migratory status of our country in its present form only legitimizes and gives additional resources to the more conservative forces in the United States to continue their campaign of hatred against our fellow countrymen and helps the more racist sectors of the north in their determination to consider our emigrants as terrorists, thus contributing to the continued ample profit of the transnational people smuggling rings."
------------------
The first month of the Mex. army's Chihuahua Joint Operation has yielded 108 arrests and the seizure of 61 firearms and 14.7 tons of weed. A public opinion poll by this paper shows that the operation enjoys a 90 % favorable support by the local citizenry.
------------------
Mexico's Under-Secretary of Foreign Affairs for North America, Carlos Rico, said yesterday that Mexico expects a frontal assault by the United States against weapons trafficking, one larger than its contribution to the Merida Initiative. He asked for operations by the U.S. to control the flow of firearms toward Mexico.
------------------
Hiroshu Kato, vice-president of a fishing company in Ensenada, Baja Calif., pulled up to his parking place in front of his office yesterday while another vehicle did likewise. The driver of that vehicle, who was wearing either a head mask or a neckerchief over his face, then riddled Kato with some twelve rounds from an AK47. The killer fled and later abandoned his vehicle on the highway to Tijuana.
-----------------
Frontera (Tijuana, Baja Calif.) 4/29/08
In separate interviews both the mayor of Tijuana and also Mexico's Defense Secretary asserted that more military operations are in the works in that area to counteract violence. The mayor acknowledged that he receives threats via the police radio on a daily basis. There are presently three thousand Mex. soldiers in the Tijuana area but the Sec. of Defense did not specify how many more would be sent there.
-----------------
El Porvenir (Monterrey, Nuevo Leon) 4/29/08
In a three day event, Mex. army & navy personnel burned a total of more than thirty-two tons of weed in the states of Nayarit and Michoacan. And Michoacan also saw its 91st execution for this year.
Re the shootout in Tijuana last weekend: 1,506 shell casings have now been collected from the various points where the firefights took place. 54 firearms and 45 clips have been turned over to the "PGR" (Mex. Dep't. of Justice). Eleven of the 22 vehicles involved, many reported stolen, had California license plates.
And the death toll has risen to sixteen.
And yet another man was found dumped along the Tijuana to Ensenada highway. The head was inside a black plastic bag; there were signs of torture and his hands and feet had been tied. He had apparently been strangled. Next to the body there was a notice reading "For being a coward and a traitor."
------------------
El Porvenir (San Luis Potosi, SLP) 4/29/08
Ruth Zavaleta admitted that she continues to receive death threats. (she is the Mexican equivalent of the Speaker of the House in the U.S. Congress and belongs to the leftist "PRD" party whose presidential candidate lost the last election by a very close margin). Diehards from the PRD believe she ought not to be working within an administration which they perceive as having stolen the election. The losing candidate, Manuel Lopez Obrador, is still considered by some - including some newspapers - to be the real, genuine president and not President Calderon. Lopez Obrador , working with the "Ample Progressive Front", orchestrated a just concluded fifteen day "kidnapping" of the Mexican Congress by physically occupying its chambers)
-------------------
El Heraldo (Tegucigalpa, Honduras) 4/29/08
The Bank of Honduras reported that individual monetary remittances from the U.S. ("migradollars") into Honduras rose to $666.9 million dollars during the first quarter of this year despite the economic slowdown in the U.S. mainly in housing construction. That amount is 12.3% over the $593.9 million sent to Honduras in 2007. The president of the bank foresees not a diminution but a decrease in the rate of growth of these remittances. "Migradollars" account for nearly a fourth of Honduras' GNP.
A wave of violence flails Honduras; the sub-headline in the report about the latest five victims linked to organized crime type murders reads: "With these cases, the (number of) victims reaches 107 in less than 24 hours."
-------------------
La Prensa Grafica (San Salvador, El Salv.) 4/29/08
A Cuban government delegation is traveling to Mexico and will begin negotiations toward an immigration accord between the two nations. The goal is to provide for a "legal, secure and orderly flow" of Cuban citizens who wish to travel to Mexico
When the pilot of a Venezuelan registry light aircraft saw that he was being followed he landed near Livingston (on Guatemala's east coast just south of Belize). Whoever was in the plane disappeared into the jungle. The plane was found to have 470 kgs. of cocaine and an assault rifle; this makes the fourth seizure this month in Guatemala.
---------------------
- end of report -