Hmong Immigrants and TB in Fresno [Brenda
Walker] - 02/03/05
The announcement that Hmong refugee
dumping, er, resettlement was being halted temporarily
because of tuberculosis received only a moderate amount
of press coverage. A Google News search for "Hmong TB
OR tuberculosis" on 2/3 got
111 hits, giving a rough assessment of its perceived
media interest.
However, an
even bigger story from a
public health viewpoint was that some of the Hmong
refugees have the drug-resistant form of TB. But just a
dozen news articles as of 2/3 carried this item and
mostly in papers in affected communities. One would
think that a more dangerous public health threat might
merit increased attention, but that has not been the
case.
The
Fresno Bee carried some
welcome cost information about treating TB:
It can cost $20,000 per patient to treat someone with
the common form of tuberculosis, Royce said [Dr. Sarah
Royce, chief of the
Tuberculosis Control Branch at the California
Department of Health Services]. Treating drug-resistant
TB can cost 10 times more than that, she said.
California
has received around 3,000 Hmong refugees since June
2004, many of whom went to Fresno. There have been 20
confirmed cases of TB among those, at a minimal
taxpayer cost of $400,000, not even considering the
more expensive
drug-resistant variety.
Fresno's unemployment rate for 2004 was 11.6 percent,
so the price tag on the many social
services required by high-maintenance Hmong is of
great concern. No Fresno public official has had the
grit to say "Stop already," though, as their
counterparts have done in
Lewiston, Maine, and
Cayce, South Carolina. And of course, no citizen
wants politicians importing drug-resistant tuberculosis
or any other kind of TB on the taxpayer tab.
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Mexican Justice [Bryanna
Bevens] - 02/03/05
Remember Tyrone Williams? He is facing the death penalty for
his role in the smuggling case where 19 illegal aliens
died during their
surreptitious journey into the United States.
14 people were indicted and at least four, which we know of,
fled to Mexico.
The four in custody in Mexico were facing identical charges
to those of Williams, sans the possible consequence of
death of course.
But not anymore!
Victor Sanchez Rodriguez, Emma Sapata Rodriguez, Rosa Sarrata
Gonzalez and Octavio Torres Ortega were released from
custody after a judge ruled that the
Mexico Attorney General’s
office provided witnesses with false identification.
Mexican judge drops charges against 4 tied to truck
deaths
By IOAN GRILLO and HARVEY RICE Houston
Chronicle 2/3/05
Yeah, Mexico in general seems to have problems with the whole
fraudulent documents thing…we see where their would-be
immigrants get it from.
Here’s the irony: Rodriguez, Rodriguez and Gonzalez are
still being detained because they are U.S. citizens and
could face extradition (yeah, right).
Either way, they rot in a cell for an undetermined amount of
time.
Octavio Torres Ortega, a Mexican citizen, just walked free.
No wonder Mexicans like to come here illegally. Who would
want to be an American…especially in Mexico?
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