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by Magdalena Fuentes |
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August 22, 2003 AmeraMex, a US logging firm, told the Mexicali newspaper La Crónica that it was subcontracted to remove dead and burned pines from the forests of the San Pedro Mártir Sierra in Baja California. La Crónica also reported that AmeraMex said that it did not have permits to operate in the forests but that the communities it was working for did have them. Baja California's San Pedro Mártir mountains and forests provide habitat for important plant species, birds, puma, bighorn sheep, bald eagles, and California condors. On Tuesday, August 19, the Baja California head of the federal Secretariat of Environment and Natural Resources (Semarnat), Carlos Alfonos de la Parra Rentería, stated that Semarnat had not authorized any exploitation of San Pedro Mártir's forest resources. Alfredo Cota Serrano, the BC director of the National Forest Commission (Conafor), said that he has never received notification from Semarnat that any forest cleanups were to take place in the Sierra. Cota also noted that "The only body authorized to do a cleanup in the Sierra is Conafor and if some company was trying to cleanup the forest, this agency would know about it." The head of the Federal Environmental Protection Agency (Profepa) in Baja California, Alejandro Alvarez Cardenas, said that he was unaware of any forest exploitation but would investigate if a complaint was filed. Jaime Fernández Jiménez Ruiz, the sub-secretary of the Secretariat of Agricultural Development for the coastal zone, said no commercial exploitation of forests takes place in the Sierra. Cleanups would be exclusively done by Conafor, he stated. Source: La Crónica (Mexicali), August 22, 2003. Article by Gerardo Franco Ortiz.
August 7, 2003 In what the Border Patrol is referring to as an isolated incident with no links to migrant hunters in other parts of Arizona, three US men using guns and handcuffs detained six Mexicans on a Gadsden, Arizona street just moments after they crossed the border. Four of the Mexicans were minors, ages 16, 10, 8 and 6. Although the event took place on July 31, 2003, news of it did not spread until August 6. At least one of the US men, Matthew Paul Hoffman, age 23, was arrested by the Yuma County Sheriff and charged with six counts of aggravated assault and five counts of illegal imprisonment. The other men allegedly involved in the detainment of the Mexicans were Matthew Hoffman's brother, Martin Hoffman, and Alexander Dumas. According to an article in the Mexicali newspaper La Crónica, the sheriff's department did not take action against the US men until August 4. A Border Patrol spokesperson explained the delay by noting that the sheriff's department was unsure of how to proceed with the case because of its unusual nature. About the event, Hugo René Oliva, the Mexican consul in Yuma, said "We are very worried that armed civilians perform these types of interventions because they are not trained to do so and the incidents could give rise to violence that would put the safety of migrants at risk" Oliva also told La Crónica that the consulate is trying to make sure that the six Mexicans involved in the incident have everything they need while they remain in the US. The six are currently staying in the US as witnesses. Gadsden, Arizona is a town just across the Colorado River from Mexico
near Yuma, Arizona and San Luis Río Colorado, Sonora. Source: El Diario (Cd. Juárez) and La Crónica (Mexicali), August 7, 2003.
August 1, 2003 The case of Mexican minors being deported from the US back to Mexico after dark has gone to the Organization of American States' Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, says Blanca Villaseñor Roca, the director of the Albergue Juvenil del Desierto (Desert Youth Shelter) in Mexicali. According to Villaseñor, under an accord with the US, Mexican minors are only to be returned or deported to Mexico during daylight hours. Villaseñor noted that in March 2003 she and representatives of other groups criticized the nighttime return of minors and pregnant women to Mexico from the US. In April, a letter denouncing the situation was sent to Mexican governmental human rights groups and the Secretariat of Exterior Relations. When Villaseñor received no response to the letter, she took the issue to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, part of the Organization of American States (OAS). According to Villaseñor, initial reactions to the situation by the Commission are encouraging. Also at the Mexicali press conference where Villaseñor made her remarks was José Moreno Mena, coordinator for the Centro de Derechos Humanos y Educación Cívica (Center for Human Rights and Civic Education). The Centro supports Villaseñor's position on the proper return of minors to Mexico by the US government. At the press conference, Mena gave statistics on the return of minors to Mexico during the period January through May 2003. Data from Mexico's Instituto Nacional de Migración (National Migration Institute) show that 14,150 minors were sent back to Mexico through Sonora, 3,137 through Chihuahua, 2,159 through Baja California, 950 through Coahuila and 460 through Tamaulipas. Source: La Crónica (Mexicali), July 26, 2003. Article by Mitzi Monge. |