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Private posses hunt Mexican
migrants for sport
By Jan McGirk
Sierra Vista, Arizona, May 6— The Barnett
boys never miss a chance to go hunting on their older brother’s
22,000-acre cattle ranch at Sierra Vista, which skirts the frontier
between Mexico and Arizona. For more than a year, the Sunday
sport of choice for dozens of ranchers around arid Cochise County
has been to stalk undocumented migrants, round them up with
trained dogs, then —at gunpoint— hand the scared Mexicans to
the nearest US Border Patrol.
“Humans. That’s the greatest prey there is on
earth,” said Roger Barnett 57, a former deputy sheriff turned
cattleman. “They’re your equal.” He shifted his assault rifle
so he could pat his muscular hound, Mikey, and then grinned
for the network news team.
The Bartletts were filmed on Wednesday capturing
nine illegal aliens out beyond their barbed wire fence, although
the haul is nowhere near their record of 86 in one morning.
“There’s no shortage,” Don Barnett, 54, told The
Independent. During March alone, some 72,000 Mexican job-seekers
tried to sneak across the flat badlands from Agua Prieta in
Mexico to Douglas, Arizona, three times as many as normal.
Since the borders were clamped in California and
Texas, said the mayor of Douglas, Ray Borane, illegal immigrants
have been swarming into south-eastern Arizona in record numbers,
using 19th-century routes pioneered by gunrunners and bootleggers.
“It’s relatively easy —flat desert terrain with
no mountains to traverse,” he said. “But they may find a gun
pointing at them, even mothers carrying babies. Last month one
group had seven bullets fired next to them and another guy got
shot in the butt.
“It is getting way out of hand. There are flyers
circulating that advertise for tourists to do this for recreation.
Bring your own RV [residential vehicle] and help out a rancher.
They even list the essentials: infra-red binoculars, dogs, ammo,
sun block. It’s a travesty of human rights.”
These amateur posses of ‘“armed private citizens”
operating along the 83-mile border of Cochise County were denounced
by the Mexican government as “xenophobic.” Meetings between
the Mexican ambassador, Jesus Reyes Heroles and the US deputy
attorney general, Eric Holder, were hastily convened this week.
Out of 25 encounters cited, the Barnett brothers were involved
in at least 14.
“I got no regrets,” Don Barnett said. “My brother’s
ranch is like a garbage dump after the illegals come through.
They leave behind tons of junk —dirty diapers, plus what’s in
those diapers. You really have to watch where you step. It’d
take 100 trucks and you still couldn’t haul it all away.
“The Mexicans get thirsty and cut our hoses, and
so our 10,000-gallon water tank drains dry. People stop us on
the street daily and ask what they can do.
“The Clinton government defends the borders of
Kosovo and Bosnia —everybody’s but our own. I consider myself
a patriot. There is a slo-mo invasion of Mexicans going on and
something has to be done. We need troops out there.”
One would-be migrant who found himself on the
wrong side of gun-wielding locals is Cipriano Ramirez. He scrimped
for years in Temoac village, central Mexico, earning $4 a day
mostly selling sweets, until he finally could pay $1,600 to
a professional smuggler known as a “coyote.”
Promising a new life in distant Chicago, the smuggler
arranged a flight north to Chihuahua, then a trip in a lorry
to Agua Prieta with a dozen other migrants. Repeatedly, they
set out for the Arizona border shortly before midnight.
But the unlucky Mr. Ramirez was deported back
to Mexico after he was felled in his third attempt to cross
the border on 23 March. “I thought it was a sure thing,” he
said from a hospital bed in Hermosillo, Mexico, where he is
recovering from a bullet wound.
The round entered his right buttock, nicked his
tail bone, and perforated his large intestine. It will be six
months before he heals, said doctors, but he is out of danger.
Mr. Ramirez, 32, worries that he may never walk or work again.
He keeps a gift box of American chocolates from the kindly American
who shot him as a reminder of the journey he didn’t complete.
He says he doesn’t have the heart to finish them.
“There were 12 of us and we walked all night long,”
said Mr. Ramirez. “But we did not know there were ranchers hunting
illegals. Some time after daybreak, I felt a sudden pain in
my belly and began to writhe on the ground. The rancher, Mr
Major, said it was all a mistake. He was firing his gun at a
dog walking three feet away from me.
“He did carry me to his farmhouse and called a
helicopter from the Tucson Medical Center. Later I lost consciousness
for five days.”
Roger Major and his 20-year-old son, Ryan, raise
winter squash and landscape trees on a 300-acre farm outside
Douglas. “My dad is on his way to Alaska now and I don’t want
to say much till the sheriff is done investigating,” Ryan Major
said. “But, yeah, there were two guns involved. It was accidental.
The Mexican had long hair and he was screaming, but he was definitely
a man. Me and my friends went and saw him in Tucson, and so
did my parents.” His father organized a medical evacuation.
In Mexico, Mr Ramirez said: “The Majors visited
and even wrote me a letter which says they are truly sorry and
I am in their family’s nightly prayers.”
He has filed a complaint and plans to sue for
damages. “I hope the authorities in the United States can find
a remedy for this problem, because we want nothing more than
to go to work,” Mr. Ramirez said. “We do no harm to anyone.
We go because the wages are so much better than here.”
Don Barnett has little sympathy. “The bottom line
is if some Mexican is squatting behind a bush on private property,
he gets what’s coming to him,” he said. “They are not all so
innocent. There are drug smugglers out there with a lot more
firepower than me. I am not a vigilante. I carry a Colt .45,
but I keep it in my holster. The day I pull it out is the day
I pull the trigger.”
Source: The Independent: www.independent.co.uk
Protesters interrupt Albright
speech
Berkeley, California, May 11— Dozens of
shouting protesters were ejected from the graduation ceremony
at the University of California at Berkeley yesterday during
a speech by Secretary of State Madeleine Albright.
Denouncing US sanctions against Iraq, protesters
repeatedly interrupted Albright’s keynote address to more than
5,000 graduating seniors and their family members at the Greek
Theater.
Moments after Albright was introduced, protesters
unfurled a red banner that read “Albright is a war criminal.”
Nearby, another group yelled, “Madeleine Albright, you can’t
hide; we charge you with genocide.”
As campus police rushed down the aisles to lead
the hecklers out, Albright quipped: “It’s great to be at Berkeley.
What more can you expect?”
During her speech, Albright urged the graduates
to aim high in their professions and choose “compassion over
complacency.”
A total of 59 protesters were led out of the theater,
but there were no arrests.
The University Medal was awarded to the campus’
top graduating senior, Fadia Rafeedie. The 22-year-old history
major from Southern California and daughter of Palestinian immigrants
earned all A’s —half of them A-pluses— and plans to attend Yale
Law School.
During her graduation speech, Rafeedie criticized
US policy toward Iraq and expressed support for the protesters.
Because of Albright’s appearance, security at
the convocation was tight. State Department security agents
were posted at every entrance, and all guests were searched
with a metal detector.
Before the commencement ceremony, about 100 protesters
opposed to US sanctions against Iraq rallied on Sproul Plaza
on the Berkeley campus and then marched several blocks to the
Greek Theater.
Some of them booed Albright when she and her entourage
arrived at the outdoor arena prior to her speech.
Waving signs and chanting slogans through a bullhorn,
the protesters decried American reprisals against Iraq that
the World Health Organization and UNICEF have concluded caused
the deaths of hundreds of thousands of children to date.
At the start of the graduation ceremony, an airplane
circled the theater pulling a banner that said, “1.7 Million
Iraqis Dead. End Sanctions Now.”
But another protest group said their plan to fly
a banner over the ceremony was canceled by US government agents.
Jason Mark, a spokesman for Global Exchange, a San Francisco
human rights organization, said the agents informed the aerial
advertising company they had hired that there would be flight
restrictions in the airspace over Berkeley.
Source: San Francisco Chronicle
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