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by toadie800 from Aurora Colorado

Last Post 19 hours Ago


TIJUANA, Mexico (AP) _ The towering black gate opens silently to an alley with walls of corrugated metal. Scrawled in large white letters on one wall is: "The End."

For those deported from the United States, the words are an unnecessary reminder. Nearly every hour of the day, guards unlock this gate that leads back into Mexico, clicking open the padlocks hung on each side, in each nation.

Every time the gate slams shut, it wipes out a dream, divides a family, ends a life lived in the shadows of the law.

On average, 700 Mexicans expelled from the United States walk through this gate daily, according to Mexican government figures. They include farmers, construction workers, prisoners, nannies, children, entire families.
A few steps from the gate, American tourists pose for photos in front of a stone relief. They are oblivious to the men, women and children sadly shuffling into a homeland many risked their lives to leave.

___

U.S. deportations have jumped by more than 60 percent over the past five years. Mexicans accounted for nearly two-thirds of those deportees, helping to roll back one of the biggest migrations of recent history. All along the border, shelters once full of people trying to cross into the United States are now home to thousands of deportees who sleep on mattresses strewn inches apart on cement floors.

In a week spent at the Tijuana gate, The Associated Press watched busload after busload of deportees arrive, some in a daze, still stunned over their sudden expulsion. Many stumbled over the Mexican official's question, "Where are you from?" after spending decades in the United States.

The faces of those who stream through reflect how tough and far-reaching the U.S. crackdown on illegal immigration has become.

Among them are young people. There were more than 18,000 repatriations of children under 18 to Mexico this year, and in more than 10,000 cases they were alone, according to the Mexican government.

There are also criminals. The U.S. does not break down figures by country, but it has deported about 55,000 prisoners so far this year. One man walked through the gate in slippers with 80 cents in his pocket, after being picked up by police during a violent fight with his wife in their backyard.

And there are women, with more than 40,000 repatriations since January — about 13 percent of all cases, according to the Mexican government. Sometimes the women are dropped off alone, at night. The U.S. Border Patrol in Washington says the safe repatriation of women is a major concern, but acknowledges there is no overall policy along the 2,000-mile border.

Mexico must now deal with a population that it has long ignored. And those returning must deal with Mexico, a land that for many now seems foreign. The challenge starts the day they walk through the gate the U.S. Border Patrol calls Whiskey II, military code for west of the port of entry.
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/caribbean/sns-a
p-mexico-forced-homecoming,0,3337113.story

follow the link for the rest of the story starting with     Tuesday morning.

At 11:03 a.m., six teenagers — three girls, three boys — line up at the gate, accompanied by a Mexican Consulate official

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Member Comments Total Comments: 5
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marilyn37 read my blog view my photos
Aug 25, 2008 | 9:00 PM

well they can always pay the fine and get in line for paper work needed to work inside the usa legally...what else is there to say.

razor51884
Aug 25, 2008 | 11:39 PM

I personally dont feel sorry for any of them. If they want to be here that bad than do something. Instead they just come here thinking its a free ride, stealing the americans identies, always getting on welfare and not letting the actually people who needs it more than anything. Now us true americans have to prove we are citizens.

toadie800 read my blog view my photos
Aug 26, 2008 | 5:41 AM

I agree. If the clinton and bush administrations had shut down the border we would not have this problem. The mexican government is also to blame. Mexico is rich in resources and people, so why does the mexican gov'mt insist on doing nothing except export its people to other countries? I really have no empathy or sympathy for these people. They need to take care of their problems at home.

Deport them all.

razor51884
Aug 26, 2008 | 9:03 AM

They don't see how big of a problem this really is. There not even trying to do anything about it and whats going to end up happening is the Americans are going to start taking it in there own hands.

toadie800 read my blog view my photos
Aug 26, 2008 | 4:48 PM

yup. It is my belife that the repubs want the slave labor and the dems want the slave vote. Mexico wants them out of there so there is less demand on their own economy.

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toadie800

Electrician,Hunter,Fisher
man Camper.

Member Since: 1/29/2008