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Old 12-31-10, 11:15 AM   #1
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Default Tijuana's Changed Migration Landscape


Stuck on the border, stranded young migrants become easy prey for prostitution and other rackets

(TIJUANA, B.C.) - In Tijuana, the modalities of migration changed significantly during the decade of 2000-2010. Reinforced US border walls, stepped-up on-the-ground vigilance, zooming helicopters and high tech surveillance on the US side of the border forced would-be migrants into more dangerous passages. The transformed landscape dramatically increased the cost of crossing, and strengthened transnational outlaw groups that profit from trafficking migrants.

Simultaneously, the new travel conditions directly impacted life in Tijuana. Entrapped on the border, large populations of Mexican and Central American migrants not only bloated the reserve army of cheap labor for the factories that assemble goods for export to the United States, but also provided pools of recruits for the businesses of drug trafficking, prostitution and child pornography.

Today, three basic means exist of locally crossing the US border without papers. For a price ranging between two and three thousand dollars per person, migrants can pay smuggling gangs to steer them into risky mountain zones or the desert between Mexicali and Arizona. A second option involves paying a higher fee of between six and seven thousand dollars for passage through one of the so-called narco-tunnels that penetrate the California border, sometimes in return for helping to smuggle illegal narcotics.

A third way is by high-speed boats that embark from beaches around Rosarito and touch shore in the Golden State. The ocean cruise is a costly one, fetching smugglers from six to eight thousand dollars per ticket. Benedicto Ruiz, a Baja California professor who studies the migration phenomenon, said control of the immigrant smuggling system has shifted from the hands of old-time “polleros” to traffickers involved in a variety of illicit enterprises.

“No longer are they the traditional (smugglers), but groups of delinquents that charge migrants and look for another passage across the border…” Ruiz said in an interview with the Mexican press.

“The number of deaths has increased, because people try to cross the mountains of Tecate and La Rumorosa. They gear up, enter arid and difficult zones and die in the intent to cross. This is constant.”

Many migrants who do not reach the US wind up living in Tijuana’s expanding “belt of misery,” populating low-income neighborhoods including Valle Verde, Obrera, Lomas Taurinas, La Esperanza, El Nino, La Morita, and others. The numbers of new residents increased even as high rates of unemployment struck Tijuana after 2008.

Hundreds of youthful migrants, including young people deported from the United States, reportedly wander Tijuana’s streets searching for food, water and money. Some live along the local river, invisible to the state and society.

Stuck on the border, the stranded young migrants become easy prey for prostitution and other rackets or get sucked into the local drug economy as users and sellers.

______________________________________________

Source: La Jornada, December 29, 2010. Article by Roberto Garduno
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Old 12-31-10, 05:35 PM   #2
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Default Re: Tijuana's Changed Migration Landscape

Sad. And yet, with the new congress about to be seated, there appears to be an invigorated fervor to tighten the border even more. Wild and crazy guess, but it would not surprise me if the US ended up giving financial aid to Mexico that dealt directly with this burgeoning problem.
Old 12-31-10, 07:25 PM   #3
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Default Re: Tijuana's Changed Migration Landscape

Quote:
Originally Posted by Bajahowodd
Wild and crazy guess, but it would not surprise me if the US ended up giving financial aid to Mexico that dealt directly with this burgeoning problem.
I think something along those lines will be the compromise deal that gets worked out...
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Old 12-31-10, 08:12 PM   #4
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Default Re: Tijuana's Changed Migration Landscape

I recall in the early 70's Tijuana reached only to La Mesa. Now it is said that Tijuana is growing by two "hectarias" daily with the influx of deportees and people from "el sur". Even in San Quintin last month, I was told that 60% of the people there are now from Sinaloa and Oaxaca. We were even approached by Soriana to purchase a piece of land so that they can build a major store and distribution center.
Old 12-31-10, 08:20 PM   #5
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Default Re: Tijuana's Changed Migration Landscape

There has been some rumors going around about a major market chain coming down here. That could be good news for you...

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Old 01-01-11, 05:16 PM   #6
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Default Re: Tijuana's Changed Migration Landscape

Given the population stretching from Camalu through Lazaro Cardenas, I had often wondered why no significant retailer hadn't put in a store.
Old 01-01-11, 05:26 PM   #7
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Default Re: Tijuana's Changed Migration Landscape

I dont know if anyone has noticed all the building going on up the new road from Rosirita to Oti Mesa. They are building apt's by the thousands all back in those hills.
Old 01-01-11, 05:43 PM   #8
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Default Re: Tijuana's Changed Migration Landscape

There are over a million Mexicans working in some 3,000 maquiladora plants near the border. Tijuana has more than its fair share. Those folks gotta live somewhere.
Old 01-01-11, 05:48 PM   #9
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Default Re: Tijuana's Changed Migration Landscape

I think those are mostly developments that are built to be sold via the Infonavit program, a government subsidized program offering affordable housing with low cost financing.
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