Memo From Mexico, By
Allan Wall
How Mexico Handles Illegals
– Oops, Mexican Indians!
The
Mexican government demands that Americans grant
amnesty
and
government benefits to Mexican illegal aliens in the
United States. But
for
years Mexican immigration officials have
detained, imprisoned and deported
Central American illegal aliens. Somehow, Mexico's
immigration policy is not on the negotiating table.
Check this out: on January 4th, in Sonora,
Mexico, seven Mexican Indians—Mexican citizens of
non-European, indigenous origin—were mistaken for
Guatemalans, detained by the INM (Mexican
INS), then imprisoned for ten days and almost
deported to Guatemala!
The detainees were from the state of Chiapas (which
borders Guatemala). They had traveled by plane to Sonora
(which borders Arizona) in order to work at a job they
had already been contracted for. They were mistaken for
Guatemalans by INM officials in the Hermosillo, Sonora
airport.
To
be sure, there are great differences between northern
and southern Mexico—cultural differences, economic
differences and yes—racial differences. On the other
hand, Chiapans and Guatemalans do share a number of
similarities. So it's entirely understandable that INM
inspectors in Sonora would confuse them.
But hey, isn't that racial profiling?
And besides, the Chiapans had ID—it just wasn't
accepted.
Adriana Ventura, one of the detained Chiapans, described
the situation thusly:
"our destination was
Caborca, Sonora, where we were contracted as laborers,
but in Hermosillo....migration agents in the
airport....detained and imprisoned us....under the
argument that we were Guatemalans and that our ID's were
false."
The detainees were taken to Chiapas, and their Mexican
citizenship was not discovered until they were on the
Mexican-Guatemalan border, on the verge of being
deported to Guatemala, after ten days of imprisonment.
The seven detainees reported being "....ill-treated,
insulted and threatened by Migration agents, who
provided them with neither water nor food ...." which,
to add insult to injury, they had to pay for themselves.
There are several pertinent questions one could ask in
response to this incident:
-
Was it an isolated incident, or
does it occur more frequently?
-
What does it indicate about
racial profiling and
Mexican race relations
in general?
-
Since the Mexican government
provides
consular cards to Mexican illegal aliens in the
U.S. (to prevent their deportation to Mexico), what
can the same government do for Mexican citizens in
Mexico to prevent their deportation to Guatemala?
Allan Wall is an
American citizen who has lived and worked in
Mexico since 1991. Presently employed as an
English instructor, Allan has legal permission
from the Mexican government to live and work in
Mexico under the rubric of an FM-2 migration
document. His VDARE.COM articles are archived
here;
his Frontpage.com articles are archived
here. Allan Wall
welcomes questions or comments (pro or con) at
allan39@prodigy.net.mx.
January 28, 2002