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  • Trying to Stop Surge of Illegal Migrants,

    New York Times, NY
    Aug 7 2004

    Trying to Stop Surge of Illegal Migrants, Mexican Authorities Meet
    Them at the Airport
    By GINGER THOMPSON

    Published: August 8, 2004


    Arturo Fuentes for The New York Times

    Illegal migrants being held last week at a detention center east of
    Mexico City. Mexico has detained 112,000 illegal migrants so far this
    year, and the authorities expect total detentions in 2004 to reach
    200,000.


    MEXICO CITY, Aug. 7 - It's 6 p.m., the busiest time of night during
    the busiest time of the year at Benito Juárez International Airport.

    The migration supervisor, Alberto Pliego, calls it Jumbo Hour. It
    looks a lot like a human salmon run.

    Mr. Pliego has at least six 747's pulling in from Frankfurt, Madrid,
    Paris, Amsterdam and Vancouver, and five agents. Their job is to
    stand in front of the flow of passengers pouring from the planes and
    pick out which ones are tourists and which are migrants trying to get
    past them and get to the United States.

    "A migrant who makes it past the airport today,'' Mr. Pliego said,
    "will be in Tijuana tomorrow, and probably in Chicago the day after
    that."

    Migrant smugglers - whose business is worth an estimated $1 billion
    in this hemisphere, second in profits to drugs - do a brisk business
    at the airport, which receives about 10,000 passengers each day.

    Mr. Pliego's suit and tie made him look a little too buttoned down to
    guard against some of this country's most unscrupulous criminal
    operations. But by the end of the night, he had stopped more than a
    dozen Brazilians who tried to enter Mexico as tourists, but lacked
    suitcases, hotel reservations or credit cards. He supervised the
    deportation of two undocumented Armenians. Three Guatemalans were
    caught trying to enter the country with false visas. And one of Mr.
    Pliego's agents caught four undocumented Chinese travelers lingering
    over soft drinks and sandwiches in an airport restaurant.

    The agent spoke no Chinese. The Chinese spoke no Spanish. But in
    limited English, each side seemed to completely understand the other.

    The agent speculated that the Chinese men were waiting for a guide to
    help them get past migration checkpoints.

    The Chinese said they were hungry.

    The agent asked the Chinese for their travel visas.

    The Chinese said they planned to stay in Mexico for only one night.

    The agent escorted the Chinese men back to the same airplane on which
    they had arrived, ordering them back to Amsterdam.

    The Chinese boarded without putting up a fight.

    The Mexican authorities report that a surging number of migrants from
    all around the world are traveling through Mexico to get to the
    United States. So far this year, Mexico has detained nearly 112,000
    illegal migrants, compared with 150,000 in all of 2001. Authorities
    said they expected total detentions for this year to reach 200,000.
    The Mexicans are under tough pressure from the United States, which
    since Sept. 11 has feared that global terrorists could easily slip
    into Mexico and then cross into the United States.

    The overwhelming majority of those detained are from Central and
    South America, authorities report. But there are also increasing
    numbers from as far away as Pakistan, Armenia, Bosnia and
    Herzegovina, Poland, Ethiopia and China.

    The migrants often arrive at Mexico's main airports and then travel
    by land to the border. But illegal migration routes and methods are
    as diverse as the people who use them. On Wednesday, the Mexican
    authorities detained four Chinese migrants on a private jet that made
    an emergency landing for fuel in the southern state of Chiapas. The
    pilots reported that they had picked up their undocumented passengers
    in Caracas, Venezuela, and that they planned to deliver them to
    smuggling contacts at a small airport north of Mexico City.

    At a migration detention center to the east of Mexico City holding
    500 people of every background, each farmer, bricklayer, auto
    mechanic and accountant had an epic story to tell. The director of
    the center, Hugo Miguel Ayala, said the migrants came from more than
    a dozen countries.

    Among them was a 35-year-old Ethiopian woman named Alemayehu, who
    said she traveled from her homeland to Egypt, Moscow, Havana and
    Nicaragua before boarding a bus bound for Mexico City, hoping to
    reach New York.

    And there was Yu Youqiang, who left his wife and small daughter in
    Fujian, China, to seek work in New York. He said he traveled to
    Frankfurt, then to Mexico taking nothing but a backpack and travel
    instructions from a smuggler scribbled on a scrap of paper.

    A 32-year-old vegetable vendor, Mr. Yu said he had made it all the
    way to the border before he was caught by the Mexican authorities in
    a town whose name he could not recall. He said he had paid smugglers
    $5,000 for help reaching the United States. Relatives, he said, had
    agreed to pay $25,000 more once he arrived in New York.

    "We come through Mexico because it's cheaper," he said in English and
    through a translator. He said some Chinese migrants flew directly to
    the United States from Hong Kong. But false visas cost a lot. And
    entering the United States through an airport is much harder than
    entering through the border.

    "They say that it's easy to get across," Mr. Yu said. "You just have
    to walk."

    It's fairly easy for Brazilians to enter Mexico. They are among 46
    nationalities that are not required to get Mexican visas. The Mexican
    authorities report that Brazilians are coming in droves, and heading
    straight for the United States.

    Migrants' passage through Mexico, while not new, is surging. The
    country's border with the United States has long made it a natural
    transshipment point for all kinds of illegal trafficking including
    drugs, guns and migrants. But since the Sept. 11 attacks against the
    United States, migration has become a national security priority -
    and often the source of diplomatic tensions - for authorities on both
    sides of the United States-Mexico border.

    The United States has pressed hard on the Mexican government to
    increase security at its airports and borders, and to crack down
    against the criminal organizations that smuggle migrants into the
    United States, arguing that smugglers - known in Mexico as coyotes -
    could be easily enlisted by terrorists.

    Mexico, cash poor and rife with corruption, struggles to comply with
    its neighbor's demands.

    In an interview, Interior Minister Santiago Creel said Mexico had
    made important strides in preventing this country from becoming a
    transshipment point for terrorists. In December, the government
    upgraded systems that track foreigners who enter and reside in
    Mexico. In the last two years, Mr. Creel said, the government has
    dismantled more than 10 important migrant smuggling organizations,
    including one that was led by some 44 migration agents and police
    officers. But so far, the authorities have not detained any suspected
    terrorists trying to enter the United States from Mexico.

    Mexico seems burdened in the struggle. While illegal migration
    through Mexico has increased by 144 percent over the last year,
    authorities said, the National Migration Institute has grown less
    than 10 percent. Magdalena Carral, the commissioner of the institute,
    says she has about $140 million a year to spend on security at all of
    Mexico's airports, seaports and land borders. The United States
    spends some $700 million to secure its borders, and the United States
    Border patrol has tripled in size. Ms. Carral said that while more
    than 14,000 American agents patrol the 2,000-mile United
    States-Mexico border, Mexico has fewer than 329 agents covering its
    700-mile border with Guatemala.

    "The question we must ask is are we in a better position today to
    stop the flow of migrants through the country, and the answer to that
    question is yes," said Mr. Creel, the interior minister. "But if you
    ask do we have systems that are able to stop anyone and everyone from
    crossing, the answer is no.

    "We do not have such systems," he added, "but neither does the United
    States."

    That point became alarmingly clear two weeks ago with the arrest of a
    48-year-old woman carrying a ripped South African passport and $7,000
    in assorted currencies.

    United States Border Patrol officers detained the woman, Farida
    Goolam Mahomed Ahmed, at an airport in the border city of McAllen,
    Tex. Initial reports following Ms. Ahmed's detention indicated that
    she was being held in federal custody as a suspected terrorist. Two
    weeks later, authorities have failed to charge Ms. Ahmed with
    anything more than illegally entering the United States and altering
    a passport.

    Still, Mexicans and Americans said her case was a reminder that the
    border they share remains porous and unsafe, that migrant smuggling
    thrives and that the threat of a terrorist entering from Mexico
    remains real.

    One Mexico City columnist proclaimed this week, without supporting
    evidence, that Al Qaeda was operating in Mexico. The American
    authorities and a high-level intelligence official in Mexico's
    Interior Ministry dismissed the column. However, the Mexican official
    acknowledged that the possibility is worrisome.

    "Welcome," he said, "to my nightmare."

    Gustavo Mohar, a migration expert who formerly served in Mexico's
    Foreign Ministry, said: "It is a very frightening scenario, but real.
    If we continue to have a border that allows tens of thousands of
    people to cross without papers, you never know when you are going
    have someone cross who is a threat."
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