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Activists flood immigration hearing
by Gillian Brockell, Medill News Service
Arlington, Va. (UPI) Aug 25, 2011

disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

Immigration activists flooded into a public hearing and confronted an Immigration and Customs Enforcement official in Virginia to protest a program they say is heavy-handed and a threat to public safety.

About 400 opponents of the Secure Communities Program, which uses state and local law enforcement biometric databases to identify illegal immigrants, demonstrated outside the George Mason Law Center in Arlington, Va., where Wednesday's hearing was conducted, before filling auditorium seats inside.

This is the last stop on a national tour for a non-governmental task force appointed to evaluate the program and recommend changes. Previous hearings in Los Angeles, Dallas and Chicago were also met with large demonstrations.

Activists from Casa de Maryland interrupted the public testimony period to bring out two women in deportation proceedings to speak to Marc Rapp, the ICE acting assistant director for the Secure Communities Program, who sat in the audience.

Hearing organizers attempted to ignore the scene and called on the next members of the public listed to speak, all of whom said they wished to donate their time to the women. The organizers eventually relented.

"Mr. Rapp, I am not a criminal," Maria Bolanos said through an interpreter.

Bolanos may be deported after calling police during a domestic dispute last Christmas. While on the scene, police officers arrested her for illegally selling a telephone card to a neighbor, a charge that was later dropped. Bolanos said she is afraid to leave her 2-year-old daughter, who is a U.S. citizen.

"I hope you understand, Mr. Rapp," she said. "Maybe you are a parent, too."

Rapp didn't respond to the women and declined to comment.

S-Comm advocates say using identification data such as fingerprints that have already been gathered by state and local jurisdictions help ICE identify, prioritize and remove criminal aliens who pose a threat to public safety.

Since the program began in October 2008, more than 277,000 immigrants have been transferred into ICE custody and more than 120,000 have been deported.

But 28 percent of those deported under the program were never charged with a crime, the agency's own data indicates. Another 31 percent were convicted of low-level offenses, such as traffic violations.

Marisa Vertrees, of the St. Charles Borromeo Catholic Church in Arlington, said her church is working with a young man who is in deportation proceedings after being detained for not wearing a seatbelt.

"Is this really who we wish immigration enforcement to be targeting?" she said.

Ira Mehlman, a spokesman for the Federation for American Immigration Reform, said even if an illegal immigrant isn't prosecuted, they still did something to warrant being fingerprinted.

"There seems to be a sense that only reason someone should be deported is if they committed some heinous crime," he said. "The job of ICE and (the Department of Homeland Security) isn't to make people who are violating immigration laws feel entirely comfortable."

Immigrant and public safety advocates also say the fear of deportation keeps illegal immigrants from reporting crimes, putting them and everyone else in the community in danger.

"Without assurances that contact with the police would not result in purely civil immigration enforcement action, the hard-won trust, communication and cooperation from the immigrant community would disappear," said a representative for the Major Cities Chiefs Association in a statement.

The situation looks a lot different to a cop on the street than it does to the "political brass that run the departments," Mehlman said. Police officers frequently get information from sources that may not be following the letter of the law without reporting those minor offenses, he said.

"There's no reason for people to fear that if they pick up the phone to say, 'This is what I saw,' they're going to get deported," he said.

Opponents of S-Comm claimed that's exactly what happened to Bolanos.

Shortly after the women's testimony, members of Casa de Maryland walked out of the auditorium, chanting: "End it. Don't amend it."

This was the public hearing before the task force makes recommendation to ICE Director John Morton.




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EU: OKs needed to impose border controls
Brussels (UPI) Aug 25, 2011 - EU members seeking to restrict movement in the passport-free zone will need to gain permission from Brussels, an early draft of a new proposal indicates.

The draft of a new European Commission proposal was obtained by the Financial Times.

In it, the European Union proposes that any member state seeking to impose stepped-up border security within the passport-free Schengen Area for longer than five days will need to get permission from Brussels.

The move comes at a time when the EU is facing challenges to the freedoms of the Schengen zone, mainly coming from Northern European countries following the arrival of thousands of North African refugees fleeing the upheavals of the Arab Spring.

The newspaper reported the proposal would tighten the EU's controls on member states' latitude to institute separate passport requirements -- a first since the Schengen Area was instituted in 1995.

Reportedly among its provisions is a new maximum time limit of six months for any unilateral border actions, as well as review checks every 30 days, something sure to be opposed by national governments.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy has demanded changes to the free travel regime after tens of thousands of Tunisian refugees landed in Italy and crossed into France in April, prompting Paris to send police reinforcements to its border and sparking a diplomatic row.

Italy granted 20,000 temporary visas to travel freely in the Schengen Area and insisted Europe needed to share the burden but France responded by refusing to let Tunisian migrants cross the border -- even temporarily suspending a rail link between the countries.

In Germany, Bavarian Interior Minister Joachim Herrmann threatened to stop the refugees by invoking his regional powers to impose restrictions on the German-Austrian border, The Daily Telegraph reported.

Brussels this month for the first time gave its approval under an "exceptional circumstance" to Spain allowing it to block an influx of Romanian migrants on the grounds they would flood the country's already hard-hit labor market.

The move reflected fears that the European debt crisis and resulting austerity measures in struggling nations will spark waves of migration northward, The New York Times reported.

Northern European critics say "false asylum-seekers" from Serbia are using the passport-free zone to seek residence there and, as a result, Belgrade could face the suspension of its full privileges under Schengen -- a potential blow to its hopes of joining the EU.

The same problem exists in Macedonia. Minister of Foreign Affairs Nikola Poposki said this week the Balkans nation is doing all it can to stop the flow of asylum-seekers from within its borders.

The country promised "active cooperation with the EU member states/Schengen countries and the European Commission" in a bid to "reduce and contain the number of asylum seekers, as well as maintaining it at a low level."

Brussels' new proposal would have to be approved by the European Parliament before becoming law.

In addition to its move against internal border controls, the measure also has a separate mechanism meant to strengthen the EU's external borders.

There, it would tighten checkpoint inspections and warns countries that repeatedly fail to control illegal immigration could be bounced from the Schengen Area, the Financial Times said.





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France's Sarkozy in China for talks with Hu
Beijing (AFP) Aug 25, 2011
French President Nicolas Sarkozy arrived in Beijing Thursday for talks with his Chinese counterpart that are expected to be dominated by the eurozone debt crisis and reconstruction in Libya. Sarkozy's brief stopover, on his way to the French territory of New Caledonia, will mark his sixth visit to China - a fellow UN Security Council permanent member and the world's second-largest economy. ... read more


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