Showing posts with label Immigrants. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Immigrants. Show all posts

Sunday, July 14, 2019

As US agents prepare to arrest 'thousands,' migrants live in fear


NEW YORK, United States — Thousands of undocumented immigrants were waiting in fear and uncertainty ahead of nationwide raids Sunday that President Donald Trump said would lead to a wave of expulsions.

Demonstrators in dozens of cities protested the planned raids, and local and state officials called for restraint, but to no effect.

Before dawn on Sunday, agents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) are expected to hit the streets of at least 10 major American cities with plans to arrest some 2,000 undocumented migrants who entered the United States recently.

The scope of the operation appears far more modest than the "millions" Trump had promised would be detained and expelled when he first mentioned the raids -- and subsequently postponed -- last month.

But that has not eased the anguish felt by those who fear they might be targeted.

Adding to their concerns are media reports that ICE agents are prepared to scoop up not just those targeted by removal orders but also other undocumented migrants that agents may come upon incidentally.

That, potentially, could include some migrants who have been in the country for years, with homes, jobs and children who are US citizens.

'It's traumatizing' 

"This uncertainty, this fear, is wreaking havoc," Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot said on CNN. "It's traumatizing people."

Trump insisted on Friday that "most mayors" want the raids.

"Most mayors do. You know why? They don't want to have crimes in their cities," he said, repeating his frequent -- and incorrect --  assertion that migrants are more likely to be criminals than native-born Americans.

Several mayors have expressed concern about the federal operation.

Miami Mayor Francis Suarez pointed out that in 2018, his first year in office, his Florida city experienced its "lowest homicide rate in 51 years -- so I don't understand the rationale for choosing Miami."

"It doesn't make it easier for us, as mayors, to keep our citizens and those who are in our city ... quiet and calm."

'A political act' 

Some city officials, as well as pro-migrant and civil rights groups, have sought to educate those who might be targeted on their rights in the event of a raid. 

"We're asking people, if you are in fear of deportation, to stay in on Sunday, to travel in groups," Atlanta Mayor Keisha Bottoms said on CNN. If "someone comes to your door, please don't open the door unless they have a warrant."

New York Mayor Bill de Blasio told MSNBC he sees the raids as "a political act to convince a lot of people in America that immigrants are the problem."

Like many other city officials, he fears the aggressive roundup could intimidate migrants, making them less likely in future to cooperate with local police, thus making it harder to ensure public safety.

Millions 'in line' 

"We have millions of people standing in line waiting to become citizens of this country," Trump said Friday.

He said it would be unfair to them if others could simply cross the border in an attempt to gain the privileges of American life.

But the impending raids have raised concerns about how a new influx could affect federal detention centers already badly overcrowded. 

The United States has been struggling for more than a year with a migration crisis on its southern border, as thousands of people stream into the US each month, mostly from Central American countries riven by violence and poverty.

The number of undocumented arrivals totaled more than 100,000 last month -- down 28 percent from May but still at a "critical" level, according to the Department of Homeland Security.

On Friday and Saturday, dozens of protests were organized across the country by groups demanding the closing of overcrowded detention centers and opposing the planned raids.

Requisitioning hotels? 

Several American news outlets have reported on centers holding young children, separated from their parents, in crowded and unhygienic conditions.

US officials have acknowledged the overcrowding but insisted they are doing their best to provide decent conditions.

Some reports Saturday suggested that ICE might have to requisition hotel rooms to accommodate those detained in the upcoming raids.

A major hotel chain, Marriott International, was asked by AFP whether it had been contacted by the government.

It said it had not yet been contacted, but added, "Marriott has made the decision to decline any requests to use our hotels as detention facilities."

source: philstar.com

Saturday, February 9, 2013

Fil-Ams set to lobby for immigration reform


LOS ANGELES – In the wake of the unveiling of an immigration policy ‘blueprint’ agreed upon by a bipartisan group of Senators, Filipino-Americans in the United States are now looking to make a strong push for immigration reform through ‘aggressive lobbying’ in Washington, DC.

Lolita Andrada Lledo of the Pilipino Workers Center told Balitang America that advocates are now planning to pay visits to lawmakers, who are in the middle of crafting and debating the legislative reform.

Lledo also said that she plans to go to the nation’s capital within the next two weeks, where she will be meeting with other groups advocating for immigration as they push for the policy reform.

According to Dr. Leo Pandac, spokesperson of the National Asian Republican Coalition, the biggest obstacle to the proposed reform lies in the House of Representatives, where a majority of seats belong to Republicans who fear the possible backlash from conservative voters in their districts.

“In their district, people are against immigration so they have to be against immigration or they’re not coming back to Congress,” said Pandac in a report by Balitang America.

‘Let’s start with this’

The immigration policy ‘blueprint’ unveiled by a group of Senators from both the Democrat and the Republican parties presented a possibility of a path to citizenship for as many as 11 million undocumented immigrants who are already here in the US.

According to a report by the Associated Press, the proposed immigration reform has four main goals:

-Creating a path for citizenship for undocumented immigrants already here, while beefing up border security and improving the tracking system for immigrants who are here on visas.

-Reforming the legal immigrations system, including the granting of green cards to immigrants with advanced degrees in science, technology, engineering and math from American universities.

-Creating a non-forgeable system that will allow employers to verify the legal status of prospective workers to prevent the hiring of illegal immigrants in the future.

-Allowing more skilled workers into the US, and letting employers hire immigrants upon demonstrating that they are not able to recruit US citizens into their workforce; and establishing an agricultural worker program.

“Sa akin, okay na ito,” Lledo told Balitang America. “Let’s start with this and kung ano pa ang ma-push natin.”

Lledo reiterated that there must be a ‘very clear mindset’ that there is a path to citizenship in the current set of legislative proposals.

Filipino Republicans are also looking forward to seeing the reform enacted. Pandac, who spoke for the conservative Pinoys, pointed out that immigration reform should be a long-term solution.  He pointed out that the last time a solution to illegal immigration was enacted was in 1982, during the Reagan administration.  Over four million undocumented immigrants benefitted from that legislative reform in the 80s.

Vargas urges undocumented to come out, be unafraid

Filipino Pulitzer Prize winner Jose Antonio Vargas, reacting to President Obama’s speech in Las Vegas about comprehensive immigration reform, said that undocumented Filipinos should not be ashamed anymore and that the ‘time to be scared is over.’

“You cannot solve something you cannot face, that’s the bottom line and we as a community need to support each other,” Vargas said.

Vargas, together with a team of journalists from the Washington Post, won the Pulitzer Prize in 2008 for reportage on the Virginia Tech shootings. In 2011, Vargas admitted that he was an undocumented immigrant. He has since become a strong advocate for immigration law and reform.

source: asianjournal.com

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Obama wants immigration bill 'very soon'


WASHINGTON DC - President Barack Obama on Wednesday urged lawmakers to agree as early as January on a bill to lay a path to citizenship for the estimated 11.5 million illegal immigrants in the United States.

"I'm very confident that we can get immigration reform done," Obama told reporters at his first press conference since a decisive November 6 re-election victory in which Hispanic voters played a major role.

"My expectation is that we get a bill introduced and we begin the process in Congress very soon after my inauguration," said Obama, who is due to begin his second term after a January 21 inauguration ceremony.

Republican nominee Mitt Romney's tack to the right during his presidential campaign, particularly on immigration, was a key reason he lost the Hispanic vote by a substantial margin.

Now, with Republicans soul-searching in the aftermath of their defeat, agreeing to immigration reform is seen as one way to frame the party as more inclusive of Latinos, the fastest-growing ethnic group in the United States.

"Before the election I had given a couple of interviews where I predicted that the Latino vote was going to be strong, and that that would cause some reflection on the part of Republicans about their position," Obama said.

"I think we're starting to see that already. I think that's a positive sign," the president said, adding: "We need to seize the moment."

Democratic Senator Charles Schumer of New York and Republican Senator Lindsey Graham have already begun talks on a bipartisan bill that was shelved two years ago.

"Some conversations I think are already beginning to take place among senators and congressmen and my staff about what would this look like," Obama said.

Comprehensive reform would include measures that would retain strong border controls and penalize companies that hire undocumented workers while opening an avenue for legalization.

"It's important for them to pay back taxes. It's important for them to learn English. It's important for them to potentially pay a fine," Obama said.

"But to give them the avenue whereby they can resolve their legal status here in this country, I think, is very important.

"I think there should be a pathway for legal status for those who are living in this country, are not engaged in criminal activity, are here simply to work," he said.

Republican Speaker John Boehner, whose party retained control of the House of Representatives in last week's vote, has since expressed confidence that he can work with Obama to hammer out a comprehensive deal on immigration.

Republicans rejected the DREAM Act, which would legalize undocumented immigrants who came to the country as children, and supported tough anti-immigrant legislation in Arizona along the border with Mexico.

Rising Republican star Senator Marco Rubio opposed the DREAM Act and has declined to say whether he believes Congress should allow those immigrants to become citizens without going home first.

But the Cuban-American lawmaker, seen as an early contender for the Republican presidential nomination in 2016, made clear the day after the election that his party needed to reach out to Hispanics.

"The conservative movement should have particular appeal to people in minority and immigrant communities who are trying to make it," he said in a statement issued less than two hours after Romney's concession speech.

In a historic development in June, five months before he faced re-election, Obama suspended the deportations of young illegal immigrants under 30 who came to the United States before the age of 16.

The plan was welcomed by the Latino community and no doubt boosted Obama's re-election bid.

Obama ended up winning 71 percent of the Hispanic vote, second only to former Democratic president Bill Clinton, who managed 72 percent in 1996.

The Latino vote was seen as decisive in swing states with large influxes of Hispanics like Nevada, Colorado, and Florida.

Romney, breaking his post-election silence in a phone call with his finance committee reported by the New York Times and the Los Angeles Times, expressed bitterness about what he saw as Obama handouts, particularly to Latinos.

"The amnesty for children of illegals, the so-called 'Dream Act' kids, was a huge plus for that voting group," he said.

The number of eligible Hispanic voters in the United States is expected to almost double from 24 to 40 million by 2030. A record 12.5 million Hispanics voted on November 6, according to exit polls.

source: interaksyon.com

Friday, June 15, 2012

New US rules could spare 800,000 Mexicans, Filipinos, and other 'TNT's from deportation


WASHINGTON - About 800,000 young illegal immigrants who came to the United States as children could be spared deportation for at least two years under new rules announced on Friday by President Barack Obama, in a move that would benefit illegal immigrants from Mexico, the Philippines, China, India, Vietnam, and three Central American countries ahead of coming elections.



There are 11.5 million illegal immigrants living in the United States, and efforts to deal with their status - and provide a path to citizenship - have foundered in recent years over sharp political divisions. Mexicans represented 59 percent of all the undocumented migrants, followed by 14 percent from three Central American nations - six percent from El Salvador, five percent from Guatemala and three percent from Honduras. The Philippines, China, India, South Korea and Vietnam all accounted for two percent each.

"This is not amnesty. This is not immunity. This is not a path to citizenship. It is not a permanent fix," Obama told reporters at the White House, adding that a permanent US immigration policy solution would have to come from Congress.

The move comes as Obama, a Democrat, is courting the nation's fast-growing Hispanic population while trying to win re-election on November 6 against Republican Mitt Romney, who has taken a harsh stand against illegal immigration. Most US illegal immigrants are Hispanics.

Under Obama's plan, those who qualify would be allowed to live and work in the United States for two years and could be eligible for extensions, the Obama administration said.

Obama has long supported measures to allow the children of illegal immigrants to study and work in the United States, but efforts to pass such measures in Congress have failed amid objections by Republicans.

The president's action sidestepped Congress and laid down a challenge to Republicans, many of whom view leniency on deportations as amounting to amnesty for illegal immigrants at a time when there are an estimated 12 million such people in the United States.

Republican lawmakers attacked the president's move, accusing Obama of encroaching into Congress' authority to set laws governing US citizenship.

Temporary stop-gap measure

But Obama said, "This is a temporary stop-gap measure that lets us focus our resources wisely while giving a degree of relief and hope to talented, driven, patriotic young people."

Many of these illegal residents have lived most of their lives in the United States, attending American elementary and secondary schools.

"They are Americans in their hearts and minds; in every single way but one - on paper," Obama said.

While campaigning in New Hampshire, Romney said, "The president's actions make reaching a long-term solution more difficult."

US Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano, who made the initial announcement, said that illegal immigrants up to 30 years old who came to the United States as children and do not pose a risk to national security would be eligible to stay in the country and allowed to apply for work permits.

The policy was announced a week before Obama is scheduled to address a meeting of the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials in Florida. Romney also is set to address the group next week.

Public opinion polls show Obama receiving overwhelming support from Hispanic voters compared to Romney, but the president's relations with Hispanics have been strained because of his administration's aggressive deportation of illegal immigrants.

There are up to 2 million illegal immigrants who came to the United States as children and who remain in the country, according to immigration group estimates. US officials said the new measures would affect roughly 800,000 people.

'We need a law'

Democrats in Congress hailed the Obama administration's decision, but said there still was a need to enact legislation to permanently protect such immigrants.

"We need a law," Senator Richard Durbin of Illinois told Reuters. "But until we create this law, this is a historic humanitarian moment."

Napolitano - a former governor of Arizona, a state on the US-Mexico border whose politics have been vexed by dispute over immigration - said that "young people who were brought to the United States through no fault of their own as children and who meet several key criteria will no longer be removed from the country or entered into removal proceedings."

To avoid deportation under Obama's plan, a person must have come to the United States under the age of 16 and have resided in the country for at least five years. They must be in school or have graduated from high school or be honorably discharged from the US military. They also must not have been convicted of any felony or significant misdemeanor offenses.

Leading Republicans in Congress criticized the new policy.

House of Representatives Judiciary Committee Chairman Lamar Smith called Obama's decision a "breach of faith" that he said will have "horrible consequences" for unemployed Americans who are looking for jobs only to find that illegal immigrants will work for less money.

Other Republicans challenged Obama's legal authority to impose his plan, but did not spell out what they might do to try to stop it.

"The president's actions trample on the rule of law and remind voters of why he should be defeated in November," said Republican Senator Jim DeMint.

Path to citizenship

Durbin, the No. 2 Democrat in the Senate, is the author of legislation allowing this group of immigrants to attend college in the United States and serve in the military, while also providing them a path to citizenship. Durbin said he would like to try passing his bill this year, but that he needed Republican help to overcome procedural roadblocks.

Immigration is a big issue for Hispanics, an increasingly important voting bloc in the United States that could help determine who wins the election between Obama and Romney.

Early this year, during the Republican presidential primary campaign season, Romney said he favored "self-deportation" in which illegal immigrants would realize they would be better off returning to their native countries because they cannot find jobs in the United States.

That hard-line position could hurt Romney in Hispanic-heavy election battleground states like Nevada and Florida.

In an attempt to appeal to Hispanic voters, however, Romney has argued that his plans to help revive the US economy would translate into gains for this minority group.

Republican lawmaker Smith said, "President Obama's amnesty only benefits illegal immigrants, not Americans, and is a magnet for fraud. Many illegal immigrants will falsely claim they came here as children and the federal government has no way to check whether their claims are true."

"And once these illegal immigrants are granted deferred action, they can then apply for a work permit, which the administration routinely grants 90 percent of the time," added Smith, whose panel oversees immigration legislation and he has been on record opposing limited measures introduced in Congress.

The US Supreme Court is currently considering a challenge to Arizona's tough immigration laws targeting people living and working in the state illegally, with a ruling expected as early as next week.

source: interaksyon.com