Tuesday, January 15, 2019

UNHOLY ALLIANCE BETWEEN SMUGGLERS AND ADVOCATES: FORMER UTRGV-BROWNSVILLE ASST. PROF ON MIGRATION

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By Dr. Guadalupe Correa-Cabrera and
Alan Bersin
Opinion Contributors
The Hill

Over the past generation, migrant smugglers — at the outset known as "polleros" (or chicken herders) — have been viewed as a necessary evil by migrant advocacy groups. Smugglers acted illegally, to be sure, but for a worthy cause: To assist migrants to arrive at their destination and achieve a better life. 

Migrant activists, including church groups and human rights organizations, not only turned a blind eye to the law-breaking but affirmatively extended their support networks (and credibility) both to the smuggled migrants and to the (perceived) Robin Hoods who were smuggling them.

In what might have once seemed a marriage of convenience for a noble purpose, smugglers operated hand-in-hand with human rights advocacy groups along Mexico’s migration corridors. All of them viewed their activities as akin to the pre-United States civil war Underground Railroad: A network of safehouses, finances and routes through which slaves could be smuggled out of the South and brought to freedom.

Though it may have started out innocently enough, over the past ten years, the smuggling enterprise has changed dramatically and become thoroughly criminalized.

As security conditions improved steadily on the Southwest border and irregular entrance into the United States was further restricted, the price charged by smugglers rose disproportionately. In turn, as the amount of money generated by human smuggling grew, criminal groups operating along the migration routes — including drug cartels and corrupt law enforcement authorities — became major participants, and human smuggling became a central feature of their criminal businesses.

The ballad of traditional polleros — largely mom and pop smuggling operations — has given way to the human trafficking terror of organized crime. Border gangsters nowadays routinely inflict extortion, kidnapping, rape, and assault on migrants making the arduous journey north. It has been impossible for human rights organizations and church groups to credibly deny knowledge of these abuses.

This altered nature of the smuggling enterprise and the attendant human rights violations account in part for the rise of caravans. Migrants were attracted to the movement en masse to avoid both exorbitant smuggling charges and also the dangers of the journey. Ignited initially by community organizers in Honduras, the caravans grew organically and spontaneously. 

When they arrived on foot in Mexico, however, migrant advocacy groups — particularly Pueblo Sin Fronteras — assumed an organizing role, arranged funding and managed the logistics to transport 10,000 migrants to the northern Mexican border city of Tijuana.

In a remarkable transformation, migrant activists and advocates became migrant smugglers themselves.

The inconvenient truth is that the results have been disastrous both for migrants and for migrant advocacy groups.

The migrants and activists who sought a confrontation with the Trump Administration achieved their aim. But in so doing, they delivered to the President a border victory at a crucial political juncture: The U.S. midterm elections and the beginning of a new administration in Mexico. At the end of the year, Trump's border wall rhetoric gains momentum. At the same time, through a rather unclear migration agreement between Mexico and the United States, asylum-seekers will be forced to wait in Mexico while their requests are processed.

The confrontation at the San Ysidro border crossing had little to do with border security and nothing at all to do with an "invasion" of the United States or a major national security threat. However, the images of people rushing the border, throwing rocks at Border Patrol agents and being repulsed with tear gas, against a background of concertina wire installed by the U.S. military, could not have been better devised to foster the impression sought by President Trump. The episode, in short, was a political disaster for refugees and the migrant community in general.

Moreover, it has placed the new Lopez Obrador Administration in an untenable position as it tries to shape a new immigration policy for a Mexico which is increasingly sending fewer migrnts itself  but is now a transit zone and soon to be a destination for Central Americans fleeing violence and poverty.

To read rest of story, click on link below:

Guadalupe Correa-Cabrera (Ph.D. in Political Science, The New School for Social Research) Guadalupe Correa-Cabrera was an Associate Professor at the Department of Public Affairs and Security Studies, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley (UTRGV), Brownsville Campus and is now an Associate Professor at the Schar School of Policy and Government, George Mason University. 

Her areas of expertise are Mexico-US relations, organized crime, immigration, border security, and human trafficking. Her newest book is titled Los Zetas Inc.: Criminal Corporations, Energy, and Civil War in Mexico (University of Texas Press, 2017; Spanish version: Planeta, 2018). She was recently the Principal Investigator of a research grant to study organized crime and trafficking in persons in Central America and along Mexico’s eastern migration routes, supported by the Department of State’s Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons. 

She is now working on a new book project that analyzes the main political, cultural, and ideological aspects of Mexican irregular immigration in the United States and US immigration policy entitled “Illegal Aliens”: The Human Problem of Mexican Undocumented Migration."

 At the same time, she is co-editing a volume titled "North American Borders in Comparative Perspective: Re-Bordering Canada, The United States of America and Mexico in the 21st Century." (in contract with University of Arizona Press, forthcoming Spring 2020). 

Dr. Correa-Cabrera is Past President of the Association for Borderlands Studies (ABS). She is also Global Fellow at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars and Non-resident Scholar at the Baker Institute’s Mexico Center (Rice University).

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Great story. Most Texans have already observed or heard about this evil side of immigration, but the rest of the nation focuses so much on the politics of power that they ignore the crimes that immigration enablers impose on immigrants themselves. MSNBC, churches and other groups should have realized before they became pro-immigration activists that you can't sleep with polleros without getting fleas, lice, and salmonella yourself.

Anonymous said...

Its the end product of do-good-ers and politician's stupidity, a by-product that nobody wants and affects the whole nation. This nation with its conscious and the belief that it has a god given right to force feed the world with its moral and righteous beliefs. Anything short of this, its send its sons and daughters to do right. It happened in Europe, Japan and now the Muslin countries. After it destroys everything it resorts to restore nations that it devastated.

Maybe if it declares war on Mexico, Central America and South America and after it destroys all these nations, they now can do what it has never done before in that region. Help and restore it, just like they did to Europe, Japan and now the Muslin region.

Anonymous said...

Correa Cabrera was a terrible professor. Would actually abuse students.

Anonymous said...

Lupita was an excellent classroom professor and never abused anyone in her life. She is honest, polite, and humble and a fine political scientist.

Anonymous said...

Correa-Cabrera's classes were small because after the first of second class session, most would withdraw. Correa-Cabrera was a dictator in the classroom and was very arrogant...always telling us how her outside of class activities were more important than basic government. She should never be allowed to teach basic courses. All she wants is to speak on TV and promote herself.

Fort Brown said...

Dr. Cabrera was a very strict professor. She was not abusive at all, but very demanding and many students could not take that. She was among the best we had @ RGV. She is already missed.

rita