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At a Mexico City
press conference on May 2nd, 2009,
Mexican Foreign Minister Patricia Espinosa was on a
roll. She was going after "discriminatory
and even xenophobic attitudes" and the mistreatment
of Mexicans abroad.
"It's about
discriminatory measures",
she fulminated, and "lacking foundation…There is no justification whatsoever to violate
the rights of any citizen…" She
announced she had instructed Mexican diplomats to
"express the
unequivocal condemnation of Mexico to such actions".
(My translations).
It sounds like the
standard boilerplate
Mexican government bashing of U.S. immigration
policy, doesn't it? But this time it wasn't. This time
the foreign ministry was condemning supposed
anti-Mexican discrimination perpetrated not by the U.S.
but by many other countries—chief among them China, but
even including fellow Latin Americans.
The Mexican
foreign minister's comments at the press conference were
in response to the recent outbreak of
"Swine Flu"—now
officially designated H1N1, but, as
James
Fulford has
pointed out, called
"Mexican Flu"
in the
state of Israel.
Whatever you call
it, the disease seems now to have
stabilized in Mexico. The country is getting back to
normal. Schools, for example, were closed but are set to
re-open on May 6th (high schools and
colleges) and May 11th (elementary and
secondary schools).
Some are even
saying that the whole thing was exaggerated. (Dr.
Ron Paul is apparently of that opinion, see
here ).
Perhaps the threat
from Swine Flu has been exaggerated. But in today's
globalized world, it's quite understandable that
governments would take
quarantine-like measures to avoid the spread of an
epidemic. With a disease that can spread so rapidly and
affect so many people, can you really afford to take a
chance?
In the U.S., of
course, even a temporary closing of the Mexican border
was never in the cards. The Obama/Napolitano
administration wouldn't countenance that measure. But,
interestingly, a few Democrats, including
Senator Joseph Lieberman either called for closing
the border or said it shouldn't be ruled out.
Other countries,
on the other hand, were not at all squeamish about
taking measures that Mexicans considered drastic and
offensive. And of course, the affected Mexicans and
their government are very offended indeed. As reported
by the New York
Times, "…Mexicans say they have been typecast as disease carriers and subjected
to humiliating treatment." [Even
as Fears of Flu Ebb, Mexicans Fear Stigma, by
Marc Lacy and Andrew Jacobs, May 4th, 2009]
The
NYT reported
that the South American country of Chile refused to let
two
Mexican soccer teams compete in its territory. Four
other Spanish-speaking countries—Argentina, Ecuador,
Peru and Cuba—suspended flights from Mexico. (In
Honduras, the U.S.-based Mexican reconquista band
Los
Tigres del Norte were subjected to a
health exam before they could perform—and they
complained bitterly about it).
Then there was
China. There the government unceremoniously detained and
confined 71 Mexicans (and 29 Canadians). Some of the
Mexicans were taken from their hotels in the middle of
the night to be tested, then detained. Most of those
detained were not even sick. But China wasn't taking any
chances. Memories of the SARS outbreak which killed
hundreds in China are still fresh.
Nor did the
Chinese buckle under to Mexican complaints, as American
officials generally do. When a
Mexican consul went to visit one group of ten
Mexicans confined in a hotel, he was permitted to
deliver them food—but forbidden to talk to them!
[Influenza
traba a México y China en un diferendo, El Universal,
May 5, 2009]
Foreign
Minister Espinosa went on and on about all this at her
May 2 press conference. President Calderon made similar
complaints. And in the
United Nations General Assembly, Juan Manuel Gomez,
the country's Undersecretary of Multilateral Affairs and
Human Rights, called on the UN to stop the xenophobia.
On May 4th,
the Calderon government sent
a chartered plane to retrieve those Mexicans in
China.
Ironically, just a
few years ago during the SARS outbreak, the roles of
China and Mexico were reversed. Then, it was Mexico that
controlled
Chinese entering Mexico, and it was even reported
that there was fear of
"xenophobia"
in Mexico City's Chinatown. [They
Fear Xenophobia In "El Barrio Chino" On Account of SARS,
by Monica Archundia,
Universal, May
19th, 2003.]
I can even
understand why Mexico plays the victim to promote its
own interests. Playing the victim is a very successful
strategy in dealing with the
There is a country
though that's not standing up for its own interests, and
that's the U.S.A.
And it's not just
over
Mexican/Swine Flu. Why does the U.S. continue to
import millions of immigrants, many of whom are
incompatible,
don't assimilate, and would really be better off
staying in their home countries? Why does
Those are the real
questions Americans should be asking their leaders and
lawmakers.
American citizen Allan Wall (email
him) recently moved back to the