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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

The battle of the US-Mexico Frontier









 USA has built huge fence at the border costing billions to keep Mexican immigrants out – but does it work?

      
                                                                                                   


                                                                                      
                                                                                










                                                                   


The US department of homeland security expects to complete the final parts of a nearly 700 mile (1,100km) fence and wall along the Mexican border intended to curb the perpetual flow of Latin Americans in search of work, and to block the ceaseless caravan of drugs feeding a very demanding American habit.
The barrier covers one-third of the US's entire southern frontier with Mexico. In parts it is a fence about 5 metres (17ft) high built of a strong steel mesh and painted the same rust colour as the surrounding earth. In some places it is topped by coils of barbed wire; in others it is a solid steel wall.The fence cuts through towns and divides the desert. Its length is patrolled by thousands of armed border, drug enforcement and FBI agents. In Arizona they are complemented by an armed vigilante militia.

The remaining 1,300 miles of border will be protected by a "virtual fence" – a network of electronic sensors, cameras, towers and high-flying drones that can see for more than 300 miles – that's already in place along parts of the frontier, setting off border patrols in pursuit of figures seen scurrying across screens or picked up by the motion detectors. The whole project is costing more than $4bn (£2.6bn), with the border fence alone working out at about $5m a mile.
The barrier's supporters say it is good value for money in the face of what they portray as an onslaught of illegal immigrants – increasingly scapegoats for economic blight and unemployment as they are accused of "stealing our jobs" – drug traffickers and the threat of terrorism.
Arizona's governor, Jan Brewer, has backed the fence because, she says, her state has become "the gateway to America for drug trafficking, extortion, kidnapping and crime".





Mexican Migrants Try to Illegally Cross Border Fence into California

Smugglers attempt to drive over US-Mexico border fence

 

Suspected smugglers tried to use ramps to drive an SUV over a 14-foot (4.25-meter) fence along the US-Mexico border, but they abandoned the effort when it got stuck on top

US Border Patrol spokesman Spencer Tippets says agents spotted the SUV perched atop the fence early Oct 30,2012 Tuesday near the border between Arizona and California.
Two people on the Mexican side were trying to free the Jeep when the agents approached. They ran further into Mexico.

 

 

 

 

1 comment:

  1. Well written and thought out - I came across this while searching for photos of the border fence, and I live three miles from the Mexican border in Arizona. Thanks for posting!

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