Land transportation and border securityBorder security, economic downturn slow down illegal immigration

Published 5 May 2008

U.S. economic downturn and tighter border security have led to a steady decline in illegal immigration from Mexico; fewer immigrants who go back to Mexico try to return

Illegal immigration to the United States has declined. Border Patrol arrests are down 17 percent so far this year along the U.S.-Mexico border after falling 20 percent all of last fiscal year and 8 percent the year before that. It is impossible to know how many people are crossing illegally, the Patrol uses apprehensions to estimate the ebb and flow of traffic. San Diego Union-Tribune’s Olga Rodriguez writes that the downturn in illegal immigration has created labor shortages throughout the United States and several states are considering temporary-worker programs, especially in agricultural fields, where produce is going bad. Mexicans in the U.S. are starting to send less money home, too. Remittances soared in the early part of the decade to become Mexico’s largest source of foreign income after oil exports, but they rose just 1 percent in 2007, reaching $24 billion and in the first quarter this year, they slipped almost 3 percent from the same period last year, Mexico’s central bank said this week.

The number of returned migrants who try again through the heavily traveled desert corridor west of Sasabe, Arizona, has dropped from 80 percent to 40 percent since January, said Border Patrol spokesman Jose Gonzalez. Agents keep fingerprints on all those apprehended and can determine multiple offenders, even if they give false names. U.S. authorities attribute the drop to tighter security and a new program in the Tucson sector that has prosecuted more than 3,000 migrants for crossing illegally since it started in January. They face jail sentences from a few days to six months. None of the migrants interviewed by AP, however, knew about the new prosecution program. Those on their way home said the main deterrents were tougher security and the dangers of the desert, including bandits who rob and even rape migrants on both sides of the border. The U.S. Border Patrol has added 200 officers since last year to the Tucson sector, and a total of 3,000 agents now search the vast desert for illegal migrants by truck, horse, ATV, and helicopter. They now have four drones scanning for drug and migrant smugglers, as well as two newly built twelve-foot walls with steel posts near Nogales and in Sasabe.

At the same time, Mexican drug smugglers have started to collect fees for access to the main routes into Arizona. As a result, Grupo Beta, the Mexican government’s migrant rescue group, has seen a 257 percent increase in the number of people seeking discounted bus tickets home this year. So far, 2,500 people in Nogales and Sasabe asked for the tickets this year, while Grupo Beta had only 700 requests in all of 2007. “We can’t keep up with so many people who are heading back,” said Enrique Enriquez, coordinator for Grupo Beta in Nogales. He said his rescuers spend the day shuttling migrants to a bus station.

The crackdown has made smugglers more desperate to recruit clients for the trip north. If fewer people cross, their earnings drop. Francisco Loureiro, who runs a migrant shelter in Nogales, said that when migrants began arriving in January, the start of the high season, he spotted smugglers trying to drum up business inside his shelter. Now, local police visit the shelter three times a night. “The officers have found smugglers carrying guns and even drugs,” Loureiro said. During earlier peak traffic seasons, overflowing vans and pickups would arrive in Sasabe and then head out to the drop-off points where migrants begin their long walk. The town of 1,500 people could see its population triple from migrants passing through. Now businesses are closing and at least six safe houses and hotels have been left unfinished, said town administrator Ramona Flores. Border experts estimate that 70 percent of residents earn their living from migration. On a recent afternoon, only eight men waited for their smuggler near a pile of smashed and rusting cars.