Showing posts with label Undocumented Migrants. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Undocumented Migrants. Show all posts

Thursday, February 16, 2017

Daly City CA mulls becoming sanctuary city


DALY, CA -- Residents of Daly City are considering declaring the area a sanctuary city amid U.S. President Donald Trump's crackdown on undocumented migrants.

Daly, which is the largest city in San Mateo County, California has a very large Filipino population.

Some Fil-Am members of the Daly City Council are pushing to declare itself a sanctuary city to protect undocumented immigrants.

They say that as a sanctuary city, Daly will join over 400 jurisdictions across the United States in standing up to what they say is anti-immigrant rhetoric of Trump.

Daly Vice Mayor Juslyn Manalo, who proposed the idea, said Daly City needs to step up.

"If you look at the climate we are in now and people want to feel safe, people want to know there are safe havens. That's the difference," she said.

"People need to see it in writing for them to feel safe," Manalo said.

However, some members of the council are also apprehensive over the move.

Councilor Mike Guingona said becoming a sanctuary city meant losing out on some federal funding.

"I want to be real careful about that. I want to be careful for a number of reasons because we do have federal funds that are at stake here in our city and we rely on them a little more than other cities because we're an entitlement city," Guingona said.

City Manager Patricia Martel said she is unable to give an exact figure on how much money Daly stands to lose from Federal funding, but said it will be "several million" dollars.

Daly City Mayor Glenn Sylvester, meanwhile, said the city has already been acting as a sanctuary by refusing to comply with federal agencies in releasing information on its residents.

"Some folks are living in fear thinking that they are going to be deported. That is not the case. Here in Daly City, we pride ourselves---the schools, the police departments, and the medical facilities--we don't ask what your current immigration status is but you have sanctuary," Sylvester said.

"What I gather from the crowd today is that they don't know that so we need more of an outreach program," he continued.

The city council said it will study the impact of a potential loss of federal funding and see what resources can be made available to undocumented migrants.

Hundreds of illegal immigrants have been arrested in the U.S. amid Trump's pledge to deport 2-3 million undocumented migrants after taking office.

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Sunday, February 12, 2017

US agents conduct first Trump-era raids targeting undocumented migrants


WASHINGTON - US authorities arrested hundreds of undocumented migrants this week in the first large-scale raids under President Donald Trump, triggering panic in immigrant communities nationwide.

The federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency rounded up undocumented individuals living in Atlanta, Austin, Chicago, Los Angeles, New York and other cities two weeks after Trump signed an executive order that broadened which undocumented immigrants would be targeted for deportation.

According to ICE, however, the operations were "routine."

"The focus of these operations is no different than the routine, targeted arrests carried out by ICE's Fugitive Operations Teams on a daily basis," said agency spokeswoman Jennifer Elzea.

David Marin, head of ICE's removal operations in Los Angeles, told reporters that approximately 160 people had been arrested in the California metropolis.

Some 75 percent of them had prior felony convictions, he said, adding that some people had been nabbed solely because they were undocumented.

By Friday night, 37 undocumented immigrants had already been expelled to Mexico.

In a January 25 decree, Trump prioritized the deportation of undocumented males who had been convicted of or "charged with any criminal offense," including misdemeanors.

The order was a move to make good on his campaign pledge to crack down on America's undocumented population, estimated at 11 million people.

Marin said the operations were planned prior to Trump's swearing-in and were comparable to past actions.

He rebuffed reports about ICE checkpoints and random sweeps, calling them "dangerous and irresponsible."

"Reports like that create panic, and they put communities and law enforcement personnel in unnecessary danger," Marlin said.

The raids, which hit residential areas and workplaces, sparked protests and provoked the ire of elected Democratic representatives, notably in California and particularly in Los Angeles, where the Pew Research Center estimates around a million undocumented migrants reside.

"President Trump's policy change betrays our values," Democratic Senator Dianne Feinstein said in a statement.

"Tearing families apart isn't what this country stands for."

- 'New reality' -


In Austin, Texas, where 100,000 unauthorized migrants live, a bystander captured video footage of an arrest, which made local front-page news and ignited demonstrations.

Democratic Congressman Joaquin Castro of Texas confirmed the launch of a "targeted operation" aimed at arresting the undocumented.

He has asked ICE officials to "clarify whether these individuals are in fact dangerous, violent threats to our communities, and not people who are here peacefully raising families and contributing to our state."

Castro said the roundups were part of "Operation Cross Check" -- a series of large-scale raids that began in 2011 under Barack Obama.

The agency conducted the last sweep in March 2015, corralling 2,059 undocumented immigrants deemed threats to "public safety."

In New York, which hosts the country's largest population of undocumented immigrants -- 1.15 million, according to Pew -- a few hundred people demonstrated near the immigration services office.

Obama deported more immigrants than any of his predecessors, prioritizing the expulsion of repeat criminal offenders or those convicted of serious crimes, including rape, child pornography and gang membership.

Undocumented migrants with repeated drunk driving convictions were also targeted.

With his decree, Trump -- who vowed as a candidate to deport some three million undocumented immigrants with criminal records -- broadens the scope of the Obama administration's policy, dropping the distinction between convicted criminals and those who have simply been charged.

Activists have rallied around the case of Guadalupe Garcia de Rayos -- a 35-year-old mother arrested during a routine visit to Phoenix, Arizona who has become symbolic of Trump's hardline measures.

The mother of two US-born children was caught in 2008 using a fake social security number and slapped with a deportation order. Authorities had not previously expelled her for practical reasons, however, as she posed little threat.

But by Thursday, she was in Nogales, the Mexican border town where she crossed into the US more than two decades ago.

The Mexican Foreign Ministry said her deportation "illustrates the new reality of Mexican community living in the United States in the face of more severe application of migration controls."

The ministry urged Mexican citizens to "take precautions" and stay in close contact with consular authorities, echoing instructions from immigrant advocacy groups stateside.

El Salvador, in Central America, also is home to many recent immigrants to the United States. Their remittances are key to its economy.

"We are working to ensure that Salvadorans who are overseas, especially... in the United States are protected," Salvadoran President Salvador Sanchez Ceren told local media.

source: news.abs-cbn.com