Petition – technical issues

We are having technical issues with the host of the online version of our recent petition to protect Mexican nationals fleeing drug war violence.

We were able to download 82 of your online signatures.  We are looking to resolve this technical issue as quickly as possible or move the petition to a new online host.

Meanwhile, the content of the petition is as relevant as ever.  We encourage you to read it.  Download  it. Print it.  Pass it around to your community.  Take pen in hand. Write your congress people.

And check back on this site for more information.

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Protection and Legal Relief for Mexican Nationals Affected by and Fleeing Violence in Mexico

Please sign the petition below.

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PETITION – PDF

For hundreds of years, the defining characteristic of the El Paso/Ciudad Juárez border region has been its role as host to countless immigrants who have navigated the passage to el Norte. In recent history, it has largely been immigrants venturing from Mexico, Central America, and beyond who have passed through this border’s thresholds on their journeys to freedom and a better livelihood in the United States. While the reasons for this historical migration are multiple, of particular concern for human rights organizations has been the reality and response to refugees fleeing persecution, political repression, uncontrolled violence, and law enforcement entities that are either ineffective in their ability to protect the population or complicit in the violence directed at that population.

Responding to this reality, human rights organizations and legal advocates all along the US/Mexican border have, for decades, sought to assist individuals and families who have been the victims of violence and persecution or who possess a credible fear of becoming so. More recently, the attention and focus has been dominated by Mexico’s war on drugs, the resulting breakdown in social security, and the dramatic escalation of violence that, since its initiation in 2006, has claimed the lives of at least 22,700 people and continues to threaten the livelihood of hundreds of thousands more. The pages of newspapers on both sides of the border are filled with reports of kidnappings, extortion demands, business and medical clinic closures, massacres at treatment centers and youth gatherings, and complaints of human rights violations by military and security forces.

With little confidence in the ability of the Mexican government, the Mexican military, or other local or federal law enforcement agencies to provide for their protection, tens of thousands of Mexican nationals have escaped to the United States in search of sanctuary from this violence. El Paso chief of police, Greg Allen, has estimated that during the past two years over 30,000 Mexican nationals fleeing the violence in Ciudad Juárez have settled into El Paso alone. Others place this estimate much higher.

The United Nations Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees established that individuals with a well-founded fear of persecution or violence have, as recourse, the ability to petition for political asylum in another country. As a signatory to that Convention, the United States has committed itself to providing political asylum to individuals with a credible fear of violence or persecution. Since the outbreak of drug-related violence in 2006, however, the Executive Office for Immigration Review reports that it has received 12,110 applications from Mexican nationals seeking political asylum in the United States, yet has granted political asylum to only 232 individuals – less than 2% of all Mexican applicants. By comparison, the United States received 5,879 asylum claims from Colombian nationals during this same time period and granted political asylum to 2,351 individuals – nearly 40% of all Colombian applicants.

The disparity of these figures raises grave concerns that the political asylum process is once again being politicized so as to deny credible asylum consideration to Mexican nationals fleeing the violence in Mexico. The circumstances and statistics are eerily reminiscent of the 1980s, when refugees from Guatemala and El Salvador were being denied asylum on a wholesale basis, a reality that resulted in the American Baptist Churches v. Thornburgh landmark federal judicial decision that mandated the Department of Justice and the INS to completely restructure the political asylum process so as to specifically root out political bias.

Given the above figures, the vast majority of Mexican refugees are electing to forego the asylum process for fear of being detained, denied, and sent back to Mexico. Without any other means of legal relief presently being utilized to protect those fleeing the violence in Mexico, these refugees are instead forced to live in hiding and continued fear. Without employment authorization, and thus no means of legal sustenance, contemporary Mexican refugees possess little to no financial resources and the ever-present risk of being discovered and deported back into the very nightmare they originally fled.

In light of this reality, this Petition for Protection is being issued and the demands made that the Obama Administration, the Department of Homeland Security, and the Department of Justice:

  • Authorize an independent investigation (e.g. the Government Accountability Office) of the political asylum application process vis-á-vis Mexican nationals fleeing the violence in Mexico.
  • Restore integrity and credibility to the political asylum application process to ensure that political asylum applicants fleeing the violence in Mexico receive an unbiased and credible review of their claims of well-founded fear of persecution. And ensure that the adjudication of every asylum seeker’s case be conducted on an individualized and nondiscriminatory basis in a manner consistent with existing law.
  • Ensure that credible fear interviews with qualified asylum officers be conducted in a timely manner for Mexican nationals presenting as asylum seekers at ports of entry, and upon issuance of a determination of credible fear, that the new ICE Asylum Parole Policy be applied to those detained individuals in a just and fair manner. Mexican nationality must not be taken into consideration as a reason to continue detention and deny parole.
  • For Mexican nationals deemed not to have met the criteria for political asylum, grant relief and protection through the use of existing avenues available in law and regulation, including, but not limited to, Temporary Protected Status, withholding of removal, delayed enforced departure, humanitarian paroles, stays of removal, and deferred adjudication.
  • Recognize that the United States’ and Mexico’s decision to place their respective efforts to combat drug trafficking within the context of a war on drugs has had serious violent and destabilizing consequences for many parts of Mexico, especially along border regions, and, as is true in all wars, that the violence and ensuing destabilization continues to create casualties, killed and wounded, human rights abuses, and new waves of refugees who flee and are legitimately in need of protection and assistance.

In the face of unprecedented conditions in Mexico with a violence destroying the lives and livelihood of incredible numbers of individuals and families, we, the undersigned organizations and individuals, issue this Petition for Protection with a sense of urgency and in an effort to help bring about concrete legal relief and human support and assistance to victims of the violence in Mexico arriving in the United States.

Sign Petition

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Please download the petition, sign it, pass it around your community and mail it in to your representatives in congress.

PETITION – PDF

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PRESS CONFERENCE – Saturday – Casa Vides

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

PRESS CONFERENCE

DATE: SATURDAY, APRIL 24, 2010

TIME: 2:30 PM

LOCATION: CASA VIDES
325 Leon Street
El Paso, Texas

SUBJECT: PETITION FOR PROTECTION FOR MEXICAN NATIONALS FLEEING THE VIOLENCE IN MEXICO/JUAREZ

A coalition of community agencies, organizations, and legal advocates will hold a press conference to express serious concern over the politicizing of the Political Asylum process vis-à-vis its application to Mexican nationals fleeing the violence in Mexico and Ciudad Juarez as well as to call upon the Obama Administration to undertake an independent investigation of how the application process for political asylum is being applied to Mexican nationals. In Addition, the initiation of a national Petition for Protection effort, calling on the Obama Administration, the Department of Homeland Security, and the Department of Justice, to make use of existing avenues available in law and regulation to provide legal relief and protection to Mexican nationals directly impacted by the violence in Juarez will be released.

At the present time, the Department of Homeland Security is rejecting asylum petitions from Mexicans fleeing the violence on a wholesale basis and yet, tens of thousands of Mexicans have sought refuge in El Paso and other border cities, and now live in hiding because there is no legal avenue available for protection.

Included among the agencies and organizations issuing the statement are the following: Annunciation House, Diocesan Migrant and Refugee Services, Las Americas Immigrant Advocacy Center, Border Network for Human Rights, Paso del Norte Civil Rights Project, ACLU of New Mexico Regional Center for Border Rights, Columban Missionaries, Project Puente of El Paso, The Opportunity Center for the Homeless, Catholic Diocese Peace & Justice Ministry.

FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT:
Ruben L Garcia, Annunciation House
Voice: 915-533-4675, 915-545-4509, 915-503-4387
Email via the website
Fax: 915-351-1343

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NEWS CONFERENCE – Sat. 4/24

Dear Human Rights Advocates,

During the past several years, we have witnessed an unprecedented crisis of violence in Mexico and especially in the border city of Juarez. Tens of thousands have been killed or wounded and reports of kidnappings, extortion, carjacks are staggering. The crisis has forced tens of thousands to flee their homes, many making the decision to relocate in other parts of Mexico in an attempt to find safety. But countless others have fled their country entirely and sought refuge in the United States.

A significant number of Mexican nationals directly affected by the violence and who have crossed into the United States have petitioned for political asylum in the US. The response to these petitions has been an almost wholesale denial of asylum applications. What Mexicans fleeing the violence in Mexico are discovering is that there is no legal support or relief available to them. In addition, they are discovering that there is no political will to find ways of applying existing law and regulations to afford some measure of protection to individuals affected by the violence.

The wholesale denial of asylum to Mexicans fleeing the violence and the almost total absence of the use of alternative measures to afford some basic level of protection to individuals and families victimized by the violence has led to the preparation of a Petition for Protection demanding that the Obama Administration and DHS respond and act.

The Petition for Protection is attached. Signatories and endorsements are now being sought and you and the organization you represent are being asked to sign-on.

The Petition for Protection will be released at a news conference that will be held on:

NEWS CONFERENCE
DATE:SATURDAY, APRIL 24, 2010
TIME: 2:30 PM
LOCATION: CASA VIDES
ADDRESS:
325 LEON STREET, EL PASO, TEXAS

Organizations are asked to participate in the news conference and send a representative.

Ruben Garcia
Director of Annunciation House

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Fleeing Drug Violence, Mexicans Pour Into U.S.

from the NY Times

Former residents say drug gangs have laid waste to El Porvenir, Mexico, and those who can are fleeing to the U.S.

by JAMES C. McKINLEY Jr.

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