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May Day plans create dilema for Latino leaders

by Emily C. Ruíz

Juan José GutiérrezJuan José Gutiérrez

Pro-immigrant groups across the country are preparing to stage a series of marches May 1, pressing the White House and its Homeland Security Department to halt immigration raids and move forward on comprehensive immigration reform.

“Change is in the air,” Juan José Gutiérrez, director of Los Angeles based Latino Movement USA, promises. “My vision is that this is going to be very positive.

This year marks the third grassroots-organized May Day event with two unique factors:

  1. The marches are being guided by a national coordinating committee – The First Parliament of Mexican Migrant Leaders Living in the USA.
  2. This is the first time the marches will be held during a presidential election year.

Pro-immigrant groups from throughout the United States met in Mexico City in November to form the First Parliament of Mexican Migrants Leaders Living in the USA. Attracting minimal press attention, they formed the first national coordinating committee for the May Day marches. The initiating body consists of 46 members representing 23 states.

“The idea is that every single state and territory in the union where we have Latinos living and working should have representation,” says Gutiérrez.

National political analysts have been in open agreement for months that the outcome of the 2008 presidential election will depend heavily on the Latino and immigrant vote.

Where the experts part ways is in assessing the impact national demonstrations will have on other voters. Even among Latinos opinions range widely.

National Council of La Raza president Janet Murguía handles the subject with cautious concern.

“Marches visually demonstrate to each of us that we are not alone, but this year there is only one march that will truly empower our community and demonstrate our clout. Our next march must be to the voting booth this November.”

Elena Ríos, president of the National Hispanic Medical Association, counters, “If the marches are anything like they have been in the last few years, where more of our community are showing their pride 1and commitment to their fellow Latinos, whether they’re documented or not, I think it’s fantastic. I hope it gets media attention — and more than just Univisión and Telemundo. I hope we get on CNN and mainstream English media talking about the importance of the Latino vote in this election year. It will have an impact.”

Chicago Sun Times columnist Esther Cepeda has doubts: “The marches have become unproductive. They cause a yawn among news editors and reporters and create a backlash from anti-Hispanic forces. I don’t think the mass demonstrations get people who otherwise aren’t energized about the upcoming presidential elections to g out and get registered to vote. Is there even enough time left? There certainly isn’t to get citizenship.”

Gutiérrez bristles at those who insist that immigration reform can’t happen in an election year. “They say everyone should wait until sometime after the November elections. I disagree. Nothing can hurt the pro-immigration rights movement more than doing nothing.”

He offers as evidence: “Never before have the candidates had to deal with the issue of immigration in a very direct way.”

José Garza of Dallas, executive director of the League of United Latin American Citizens’ National Housing Commission sees it, “We need to take whatever action is necessary to get this Congress, the future Congress and the future president to really deal with the issues of the immigrant worker. What we are asking for is fairness and equity.

When it’s time to mobilize, we can do it correctly.”

The turnout of marchers has decreased nationally since 2.5 million participated in 2006.

Gutiérrez blames “the lack of nerve on the part of significant members of the Spanish-speaking media who have helped persuade the community not to continue to participate in the mobilization.”

But, he contends, “That slogan ‘Hoy marchamos, mañana votamos’ — today we march, tomorrow we vote — has crystallized the movement.

People are beginning to feel their power, both when we take to the streets and when we go to the ballot box.”
Hispanic Link.

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Boxing

Telefutura Friday, March 7 2008 New Alhambra, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

  • Rogers Mtagwa vs Roger Gonzalez (featherweight).
  • Teon Kennedy vs Castulo Gonzalez (featherweight).
  • Victor Vasquez vs Rami Ibrahim (lightweight).
  • Pedro Martinez vs TBA (cruiserweight).
  • Travis Thompson vs Jonathon Ocasio (lightweight).
  • Dennis Hasson vs TBA (middleweight).

Friday, March 7 2008 Foxwoods Resort Casino, Mashantucket, Connecticut

  • Thomas Mashaba vs Cristobal Cruz (IBO featherweight championship).
  • Harry Joe Yorgey vs Jason Le Houllier (welterweight).

SHOWTIME / Sentanta (UK) Saturday, March 8 2008 O2 Arena, London

  • David Haye vs Enzo Maccarinelli (WBC/WBA/WBO cruiserweight unification).
  • Kevin Mitchell vs Carl Johanneson (featherweight).

San Francisco network to do free immigration workshop

by Rigo Hernández

Yolanda López' exhibition at Mission Cultural Center thru March 29Yolanda López’ exhibition at Mission Cultural Center thru March 29

The San Francisco Immigration Legal and Education Network will be doing a free workshop on what to do in case that the Immigration Customs Enforcement (I.C.E) raid your home and help make a plan in case someone in your family is detained by I.C.E.

Immigration attorneys will be there to answer questions and give private consultations. The workshop will act possible scenarios as well as give information on what to do in case of animmigration emergency. There will be spanish, tag along and arabic translators and a free diner will also be provided.

The workshop will be on Thursday, March 6, at 5:30p.m. at the Judith Baker Childcare Center, at 685 Natoma St.,San Francisco, CA 94103. For more information contact Terry Valen at (415)-333-6267.

Colombian film to show paramilitary violence

The Bay Area Colombia Working Group and Fellowship of Reconciliation plans to educate people in the United States about violence in Colombia and the involvement of the U.S. in the confl ict by showing a film about paramilitary violence, Hasta la Ultima Piedra.

Hasta La Ultima Piedra a documentary fi lm, depicts the massacre of a village in San José de Apartadó that chose not to side with any group and remain peaceful.

The showing of the fi lm will be on Thursday, March 6, at 7:00 p.m. at the Mission Cultural Center for Latino Arts at 2868 Mission St. San Francisco, Ca 94110. For more info go to www.missionculturalcenter.org or www.forcolombia.org, or by email at mariacarolinaguerrero@gmail.com or events@missionculturalcenter.org.

Nicaraguan-American Chamber of Commerce celebrates Women’s Day

The Nicaraguan-American Chamber of Commerce of Northern California is inviting you to celebrate with them their annual gala commemorating International Women’s Day.

Outstanding women in business and renounced bay area community leaders will be awarded. Special guest appearances will include the international show of Martha Vaughan, singersongwriter Sergio Tapia, maestro Héctor Silva, and other artist.

The event will be on Friday March 7, starting at 7:00 p.m. at the State Room, 306 Baden Ave. So. San Francisco, CA 94080. Formal dress required. Tickets are $20. Call (415)-259-1498, (510)-329-5778, or (415)-678-7372 for more info.

Salvadorian artist showcases art

Salvadorian artist Victor Cartagena will host a solo art exhibition titled The Invisible Nation/ La Nacíon Invisible.

The exhibition will include sculptural works, video and sound installations, as well as a public digital mural, which will be displayed at Galeria’s Bryant Street billboard. There will also be an artist talk with Cartagena and Roberto Varea, Director of El Teatro Jornalero and Chair of the Performing Arts Program and Social Justice Center at University of San Francisco.

The artist talk will be on April 26 at 2:00 p.m. at the Galeria De La Raza at 2857 24th St, San Francisco. Also at the Galeria, the opening reception will be on March 7, at 7:30 p.m. Galeria hours will be from Tue.-Thur. Noon-6.00 p.m.

International film festival will show over 220 films

Over 220 films from more than 90 countries will be screened in the 7th edition of the International Tiburon Film Festival in Tiburon, CA from March 13-21.

There will be special tributes to directors, John Wayne (The Searchers), Blake Edwards (The Pink Panther Strikes Again), Bob Rafelson (Five Easy Places). The opening film will be a comedy called Twins for President directed by Spanish director Miguel Angel Calvo Buttini.

For ticket information and schedules call (415)-789-8854 or visit info@tiburonfilmgestival.com.

Bardem first Spanish to win Academy Award

by Antonio Mejías-Rentas

Javier BardemJavier Bardem

OSCAR WIN: Javier Bardem became the first Spanish actor to win an Academy Award at the 80th annual ceremony in Los Angeles.

As expected, Bardem won the best supporting actor Oscar for his performance as a psychotic mass murderer in No Country For Old Men. It was one of four awards for the film, including Best Picture and Best Director – shared by brothers Joel Coen and Ethan Coen.

Bardem is only the fifth Latino actor to win an Oscar. Previous winners are José Ferrer, Anthony Quinn (twice), Rita Moreno and Benicio del Toro. All except Ferrer won in supporting categories.

The 80th Academy Awards were held Feb. 24 at Los Angeles’ Kodak Theater and broadcast live by ABC.

MILLION-DOLLAR BABIES: Twins, a boy and a girl, born Feb. 22 to Jennifer López and Marc Anthony last week in New York may be the couple’s most profi table collaboration to date.

Jennifer López and Marc Anthony at the Conde Nast Movies Rock event in LA. Feb. 22.: (photo by the Wire Services)Jennifer López and Marc Anthony at the Conde Nast Movies Rock event in LA. Feb. 22.  ­(photo by the Wire Services)

People magazine is reportedly paying the nuyorican couple between $4 and $6 million for U.S. photo rights. The couple is said to be getting an additional $2 million from OK magazine for international rights, setting a record for celebrity baby pictures.

López, 38, confirmed her pregnancy at a Miami concert in November, the last stop of a limited U.S. tour with her 39-year-old husband.

Even though López is the highest-paid Hispanic artist in the United States, sales for her records and movies have declined in the last few years. She and Marc Anthony collaborated on her debut Spanish-language album, Cómo ama una mujer, which had worldwide sales of only 1.4 million copies.

The couple also produced and starred in El cantante, a critically-despised film about salsa singer Héctor Lavoe that cost about $3 million and yielded $7.6 in international box office sales.

ONE LINERS: Veteran actor Perry López, whose 40-year career included characters in Chinatown and Star Trek, died of lung cancer in a Beverly Hills hospice; he was 78… Guatemalan immigrant Juan Luis Ochoa Anderson, a parking attendant at a Los Angeles restaurant, won $318,000 in damages plus legal expenses from Egyptian actor Omar Shariff, who reportedly hit him and called him “stupid Mexican” when he refused to accept a 20 Euro bill in payment… and after 80 international celebrities signed a letter in support of Alejandro Sanz, Venezuela President Hugo Chávez denied that the Spanish singer, whose Feb. 14 concert at a state-run stadium in Caracas was cancelled, was banned from the country.

Hispanic Link.

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Board of Education president lauches bid for SF District 9 seat

by Rigo Hernández

Mark SánchezMark Sánchez

Mark Sánchez, President of the San Francisco Board of Education, launched his bid for San Francisco District 9 seat that has been occupied by Tom Ammiano. Sánchez, is a longtime educational activist who has been in the board of education for seven years and president for the last two. If elected he will be the second, green party member, along with Supervisor Ross Mirkarimi who is currently supporting him on his supervisor bid.

Sánchez said that among other policies, he would continue working towards progressing education, the way Ammiano has. “I think it’s really important that we continue giving a voice to education,” Sanchez said.

Paid sick days guaranteed for all workers if bill passes

Californian workers would be the fi rst in the nation to have guaranteed paid sick days if a bill sponsored by assemblywomen Fiona Ma passes.

Bill AB 2716 co-sponsored by the California Labor Federation and ACORN would give workers paid sick days that can be used for themselves or for sick family members.

Under the bill, small business employees can get up to 40 hours or 5 working days and other employees can get 72 hours or nine working days per calendar year.

San Mateo Health Department receives grant to prevent falls

The San Mateo Health Department has been awarded a one-year grant aimed at preventing and reducing accidents of falls for seniors through the farewell falls program.

The free program is home-based and focuses on the major risk factor for falls as well as medication management and home safety. To do this a therapist visits the home of the patient a total of two times to see what are the fall risk in their home and give recommendation to reduce falls. After that patients receive a phone call at least once a month to check on the situation and give more recommendations. After a year the therapist re-evaluates what are other fall risk factors and gives final recommendations.

Those eligible must be 65 years or older, live within the peninsula, must have their own home, apartment, or condominium, must provide their own health history. Seniors who are wheelchair-bound, or have either dementia or Alzheimer’s will not be accepted in the program. For more info call, (650)-724-9369.

Mayor and District Attorney announces graffiti report reward program

San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom and District Attorney Kamala Harris announced A New graffiti rewards program in the North Beach District in San Francisco will pay $250 to any individual who give information leading to the arrest and conviction of graffi ti offenders.

The program is funded by the collection of fines and fees put on graffi ti offenders. A 2000-2001civil grand jury report estimates that the total cost of graffi ti damages and removal adds up to $22,000,000 a year without including the cost on homeowners.

The graffiti rewards fund claim forms are available at the San Francisco District Attorneys office, San Francisco Police Department stations, and the department of Public Works or through each offi ce’s website. For more information call 311.

Becoming greeno

by José de la Isla

HOUSTON– So tell me again, what’s wrong with this?

The national economy has grown 54 percent since 1993. More than 25 million jobs have been created. Average unemployment dropped from 7.1 percent in 1994 to 5.1 percent in 2007. And U.S. manufacturing averaged nearly 4 percent gains during that period, almost double the previous 14 years.

To hear Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton tell it, this wasn’t good enough and it’s time to consider a “time out” or “renegotiation” over NAFTA, the trade agreement with Canada and Mexico, and other trade deals.

They were countered by a chorus of voices. One of those that rang loud came from Commerce Secretary Carlos Gutiérrez, who wrote this zinger in the Washington Post: “Taking a ‘timeout’ on trade is akin to standing at a moment when the rest of the world is moving forward.” And he added, “Suffocating our economy isn’t a viable strategy for prosperity. Pretending we’re not part of North America isn’t a prescription for growth.”

Therein lies the trade dividing line not just between parties but the ideologies going into the selection of the next president.

You can almost hear Obama and Clinton lip-syncing Britney Spears saying, “Oops! I did it again.”

Appealing to isolationism seems to be rhetorically just too tempting to withdraw from it entirely. Playing to the crowd is enticing when the audience doesn’t feel it has benefi ted as have others.

In fairness it’s hard to tell people in some parts of the country–the ones on the down side of global trade,” It’s really not all that bad overall.” Ohio has lost about 231,000 jobs in the last ten years.

But wasn’t change-wecan-believe-in Obama’s campaign theme? Change to what? How will the country redevelop by threatening, for starters, commerce with our first and third largest trade partners? What purpose does that serve if the jobs are already gone? Someone is not leveling with us on this one and that’s the problem.

Scape-goating Canada and Mexico might feel good for a while, but that’s not going to bring lost jobs back. ­A year ago, Hillary Clinton told Time magazine she believed in the “general principles of NAFTA.” She narrowed the problems down to enforcement, noting, “I believe we need tougher enforcement of the trade agreements we already have.” She claimed the Clinton administration had brought more trade enforcement actions in one year than Bush had in six.

Enforcement is a reasonable claim. But a timeout, as she asserted later, is a different matter. Obama’s assertion to renegotiate NAFTA opens up the proverbial can of worms that many experts already shake their head over.

In the fi rst ten months of 2007, trade between the three North American countries was $742.86 billion. Bilateral trade with Mexico was $290.38 billion, resulting in a $6.7 billion surplus in Mexico’s favor. NAFTA has produced a large and growing trade deficit with Mexico. The effects on Ohio and other industrial states have been overwhelmingly negative. In 1993, the year before NAFTA started, the U.S. had a positive $2.4 billion trade balance from Ohio’s cars, trucks, and auto parts manufacturing. By 2007, it had turned into a trade defi cit of $12 billion. The Economist magazine generalizing about NAFTA correctly says, “Trade hurts some people but helps many more.”

The art of the deal isn’t with threats to cut and run where it doesn’t work well but to figure out how to spread the pain and benefi ts and turn it into a winning hand. Telling workers they need to take night school courses for a new career can be helpful but looks like a Band-aid for a heart attack.

Secretary Gutiérrez’s boast about trade is no comfort for those on the short end of those proud trade numbers. But instead of a retreat from trade, this might be a good time to steal some of the Republican’s thunder. The discussion should turn next to accelerating the development of new technologies and how we will transition into a wellpaid, sustainable, green post-industrial, education and training-centered economy. The emphasis is no longer if but how.

[José de la Isla, author of “The Rise of Hispanic Political Power” (Archer Books, 2003) writes a weekly commentary for Hispanic Link. E-mail joseisla3@yahoo.com]. ©2008

The Great Wall of the United States

by Felipe de Ortego y Gasca

In the current flap over building a wall between Mexico and the United States, it would be well to keep in mind Robert Frost’s injunction “something there is that doesn’t love a wall.” That “something” is that a wall is a barrier.

In the case of a “wall” between the United States and Mexico, a wall is a manifestation of conflict, just as the Berlin Wall was a manifestation of conflict. A wall between the United States and Mexico will only escalate the enmity between the two countries.

Ronald Reagan’s plea to Gorbachev to “tear down this wall” referring to the Berlin Wall is not what brought down the wall. it was Mikhail Gorbachev’s response that brought down the wall. Instead of escalating the cycle of conflict, the Soviet leader chose to ignore the rhetoric of conflict and for whatever reasons took the first step in repairing U.S.-Soviet relations.

When asked about the U.S.-Mexico wall in a 2006 visit to the United States, Mikhail Gorbachev responded that the United States seemed to be building the Great Wall of China between itself and Mexico.

In the current rhetoric about controlling the nation’s borders, the question looms large: Why on the one hand did the U.S. want the Berlin Wall torn down and on the other hand does it want to build a wall between the U.S. and Mexico?

Between the 8th and 5th centuries BC, the northern states of China built a wall along their northern border to stave off Mongol penetration. In places, the 4,000-mile-long wall was 25 feet high and 30 feet wide.

In 122 AD the Roman emperor Hadrian built a wall across Britain to keep Romans safe from the hostile Picts. The wall stretched from the North Sea to the Irish Sea, 80 Roman miles long, 10 feet wide and 15 feet high.

In like fashion, in the 20th century the French built the “Maginot Line” as a walled fortifi cation against German incursions. With the use of aeroplanes, the Germans simply fl ew over the Maginot Line. General George Patton called the Maginot Line a monument ­to man’s stupidity.

Even the Berlin Wall was not impenetrable. A U.S. wall on its border with Mexico has as its objectives to keep out extra-territorial infl uences (the uninvited, the unwelcome and the unwanted) that are deemed anathema to the apodictic values of the United States.

Why not a wall between he United States and Canada? Or a wall along the Florida coast to keep out Cubans? The inference is that Canadians and fl eeing Cubans are good neighbors; Mexicans are not. A wall between the United States and Mexico is intended to keep Mongol hordes of Mexicans at bay.

Will a wall help the United States in controlling its border with Mexico? What is that lesson here? That walls are no substitute for diplomacy.

According to the International Boundary and Water Commission, the U.S.-Mexico border, 1,951 miles long, from San Diego to Brownsville, is the most frequently crossed international border in the world, with some 350 legal crossings every year.

In a washingtonpost.com article last summer, Luis Alberto Urrea quoted the Mexican consul in Tucson calling the U.S.-Mexico wall “the politics of stupidity.”

Yes, there are many Mexicans coming north into the United States. Struggling to shake off its repressive colonial past, Mexico is like most developing nations charting a course for its people across rocks and shoals diffi cult to navigate. Democracy is a process, not a product. That’s why we can’t just hand off “democracy” to the Iraqis and say, “Make it work.” Democracy takes time. After 231 years, in the United States we are still struggling with the democratic process.

Every year hundreds of thousands of U.S. citizens leave the United States to live elsewhere. It’s sometimes hard to defi ne the nature and patterns of human migration. Hispanic Link News Service.

(Dr. Felipe Ortego y Gasca is Emeritus Professor of English, Texas State University SystemSul Ross. Email him at ortegop@wnmu.edu. This commentary is adapted from a lengthier, soonto-be-published essay the author has prepared for a university publication. Readers may find it at www.hispaniclink.org). (c)2008

A call to Sen. John McCain

by marvin J Ramirez

Marvin J. RamirezMarvin J. Ramirez

While the U.S. presidential primaries continue in heated contests in several states, a group of Republican senators introduced a package of bills on immigration that represents harsher immigration regulations ‘but not the comprehensive approach that is needed to fix the broken system.’

One of the original negotiators during last year’s attempt to pass a comprehensive immigration reform, Sen. Robert Menéndez (D-NJ), challenged on March 5, Sen. John McCain (R-AZ), the presumptive Republican presidential nominee who in the past has worked on comprehensive immigration reform, to reject this Republican approach.

In a written statement, Menéndez called on McCain to reject the content of the package.

Said the statement: “I am calling on Sen. McCain, as his party’s presumptive nominee, to reject this draconian approach to immigration reform, which would demonize the Latino community. As a past sponsor of comprehensive immigration reform who has since said he would have voted against his own bill, it is important for Sen. McCain to define his position on this cynical Republican effort. The mainstream of America knows full well that the immigration system is broken, but they also recognize that an unbalanced, narrow approach won’t fix it. We need a system that is tough but smart and civil and actually works for our economy – a system that protects the borders while protecting our legacy as a nation of immigrants. Many of the 44 million Latinos in this country will be eager to hear where Sen. McCain stands.”

Continues the statement:

difference. This is the type“The Republican Party might think this is a wedge issue for November, but their strategy only dims their chances this year and for generations to come. Latinos are not a group on the fringes of our society that can be manipulated to score political points. If this presidential primary season has shown us anything, it is that Latinos are no longer the sleeping giant in American politics – they are fully awake, active and making a ­of cynical effort that serves to deepen the divisions in our nation that we should be working to bridge.”

Sen. Menéndez’ words, however, are only part of the problems that exist in our nation. However, as a recession is starting to hit us all, no border wall, no employer sanctions, no lowering interest rates on home mortgages will cure the ills that are affecting the country. Abolishing the private corporation called Federal Reserve Bank, and reinstituting our government the right to re-start printing our money, backed by gold, will end all infl ation and will give back the dignity to every North American. The end of the problem.

Community leader María Martínez dies

María Martinez (RIP) 8/8/1939-2/29/2008María Martinez (RIP) 8/8/1939-2/29/2008

Passionate words and tears were not enough to express their love from those who took the podium to say the last good-by to María Martínez.

María Martínez, of San Francisco, passed away Feb. 29, 2008 from a cerebral illness at the age of 68.

María dedicated the past 35 years of her life as a community and political activist/advocate within the City and County of San Francisco. She was a community organizer and provided the utmost diligence in empowering others within her community and in San Francisco at large to as sume an active and positive role in the community and political process. Her work as a citizen complaint officer with the San Francisco Rent Control Board, coupled with her work as the ration representative has been carried out with the highest level of professionalism and dignity, and because of this she has made a lasting impact on the residents of San Francisco.

She was a passionate civil rights activist on local, state and national platforms. She was a former congressional aide for Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi; founder of Grupo Presente (San Francisco Latino City and County Employees Group), and was just recently elected as the chair of the Chicano Latino Caucus of the California State Democratic Party.

California Sen. Gil Cedillo, the restless champion of Latino’s ongoing struggle to obtain Driver’s License to the undocumented came to give his respects to María, as well as members of different worker’s union and community leaders.

Her community involvement included being a former member on the Board of Directors, Haight Ashbury Free Clinics and Mission Neighborhood Health Center in SF.

Maria Martínez’s life has left an indelible impact on the many lives she has touches. Her life shall be a great memorial and legacy for future generations. Copies of her book, Sterling Silver Roses, which was offered to most of attendees, shows much of what she really was inside as a human being full of love.

Four children survive her: Christine Martín of Hilo, HI, Debra Tyler of SF, Gregory Branzuela of Arroyo Grande, Calif., and Anna Branzuela of SF. She will be resting in peace with her late son Leonard Branzuela. She leaves behind sister Carol Real of Montibello, Calif; sons-in-law, Robert Tyler and Víctor Martín; grandchildren: Victoria Patch, Thomas Patch, Antonio Patch Tyler, Michele Garcia, Rafael García, James Jenkins and Christopher Lafave; and great grandchildren, Jerald S. Patch and Xiomara Patch.

Public tributes and a Mass Service were held on Wednesday, and a Funeral Service Thursday at Duggan’s Funeral Service, followed by a Funeral Mass at Mission Dolores Church. El Reportero newspaper offers its condolences to the family of this great woman.

Berkeley City Council opposes U.S.-Mexico border wall

by Juliana Birnbaum Fox

About 100 North American activists from No Borders Camp succesfully established itself on the U.S./Mexico border,: while about 25 counter parts in Mexico encamped in the Mexican side on Nov. 7, 2007. (photo by Indybaby)About 100 North American activists from No Borders Camp succesfully established itself on the U.S./Mexico border, while about 25 counter parts in Mexico encamped in the Mexican side on Nov. 7, 2007.(photo by Indybay)

Berkeley City Council unanimously passed a resolution last week condemning the federal government’s 1.2 billion dollar U.S.- Mexico border wall, stating that “billions of federal dollars intended for the border wall should be invested in health care, housing, education, job training, and infrastructure that will provide visible and tangible return to the country…” The resolution continued the Berkeley Council’s strong anti-military stance that created controversy last month regarding the Marine recruiting center there. “The border wall will have a destructive effect on the environment, economy and on human lives,” said Councilmember Kriss Worthington, who introduced the resolution to the Berkeley City Council.

For those living along the international boundary zone, the wall could have a devastating impact, both environmentally and economically.

Lipan Apache activist and South Texas Land Grant community member Margo Tamez stated that a number of fragile plant and animal species are being affected by the clearing of the area to make it easier to track illegal migrants. Free Trade agreements have already forced indigenous peoples into exile from their homelands in the south.

The resolution also points out the devastating economic impact the border wall will have on South Texas, where residents on both sides of the border shop and carry out commerce in the neighboring countries.

President Bush signs the border bill. Witnesses, from left, are Janet Napolitano, J.D. Hayworth, Rick Renzi, Jon Kyl: and Trent Franks. (photo by the El Reportero Wire Services)President Bush signs the border bill. Witnesses, from left, a­re Janet Napolitano, J.D. Hayworth, Rick Renzi, Jon Kyl and Trent Franks.(photo by the El Reportero Wire Services)

“It is our ancestors who worked these lands prior to the first contact between the Spanish and the indigenous,” Tamez said in a prepared statement, thanking the Berkeley City Council.

“And since that time, for the last four centuries, our ancestors have suffered much and they and the memories of our hardships are buried in these lands. It is only fi tting that the indigenous now stand up in a call for unity and justice….We are honored on this day by your resolution to stop the “wall of death.”

“Among the many issues about the wall that Homeland Security is lawlessly constructing through the International Boundary Zone between the US and Mexico, perhaps the least known issue is the continuous militarization of the indigenous communities who have been and still are terrorized bi-national peoples ever since the lines were drawn,” activist Wendy Kenin told the council at the February 26 meeting.

Homeland Security filed suit in January against Eloisa Garcia Tamez, who has been leading the resistance to the seizures of private lands in Texas. The Berkeley resolution points out that Homeland Security is waiving numerous laws, including the Endangered Species Act, Migratory Bird Treaty Act, National Environmental Policy Act, Coastal Zone Management Act, Clean Water Act, the Clean Air Act among others, in order to construct the wall.

“There is clear documentation that shows militarizing a boundary zone between nation-states increases the likelihood that people will die. Many local jurisdictions are facing fi nancial crisis and could use additional monies to offset the loss of revenues from the housing market slump, the impending recession, and the cost of the war in Iraq,” stated Gabriel Hernandez, a long-time human rights activist who drafted the resolution.

The Berkeley No-Border Wall Resolution follows a number of other jurisdictions, including several Texas-Mexico border towns, and is being considered for adoption by government bodies and institutions from California, Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, and Texas.

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