| 
World
Bolivia
Venezuela
Trinidad
&
Caribbean










|
|
Bush
gives green light for building US-Mexico border fence
AFP
WASHINGTON
Petroleumworld.com 10 27 06
President George W. Bush on Thursday signed into law a controversial
bill authorizing construction of a fence along the US-Mexico border,
shining the spotlight on illegal immigration 12 days ahead of US legislative
elections.
At a White House bill-signing ceremony, Bush said the law -- which allows
for the creation of a 1,100-kilometer-long (700-mile-) fence along a
third of the US border with Mexico -- would make the frontier more secure.
Bush called the bill "an important step toward immigration reform.
"Unfortunately, the United States has not been in complete control
of its borders for decades, and therefore illegal immigration has been
on the rise," he said.
"We have a responsibility to address these challenges. We have
a responsibility to enforce our laws. We have a responsibility to secure
our borders. We take this responsibility seriously."
But a spokesman for Mexican President Vicente Fox said Thursday that
building a fence along the US-Mexico border would not solve the problem
of illegal immigration, arguing that the solution lies in creating a
more integrated system of US reforms.
"We do not believe that walls can solve these problems. An integrated
immigration reform system that allows for orderly, legal immigration
while respecting human rights is the only solution," said Fox spokesman
Ruben Aguilar.
The Mexican spokesman charged that the decision, made ahead of the November
7 US legislative elections, was politically motivated. He predicted
that the barrier would never be completed because of insufficient funding.
On October 4, the US president had signed a bill earmarking some 1.2
billion dollars in funding for the fence, in a bid to stanch the steady
flow of illegal immigrants into the United States.
Mexico had warned the barrier would damage bilateral relations.
The 1.2 billion dollars approved by Bush fell well short of estimates
to build fencing along the porous southern US border.
The fence's cost has been estimated at up to six billion dollars, and
Senate Democratic opposition leader Harry Reid put the price tag at
some eight billion dollars.
Republicans House Speaker Dennis Hastert and Senate Majority Leader
Bill Frist, meanwhile, hailed the move as "another step forward
in making America safer and in stemming the tide of illegal immigration,"
and took a jab at opposition Democrats who did not support the bill.
"The American people demand border security, and this Republican
Congress and president are committed to achieving operational control
of the border through an enforcement-first approach that uses physical
fencing and state-of-the-art monitoring technology," they said
in a joint statement.
They also accused Democrats in Congress who had opposed the bill of
"ignoring the demands of the American people for a secure border."
Democratic Senator Ted Kennedy, however, slammed the bill as a "bumper-sticker
solution that Republicans hope will provide cover for their stunning
failure to produce comprehensive immigration reform.
"Enforcement alone and fences alone won't work," Kennedy said
in a statement, adding that Americans "won't be fooled by these
election-year tactics."
In Ottawa, Mexico's visiting president-elect Felipe Calderon said: "The
wall will not solve any problem. Humanity made a huge mistake by building
the Berlin wall, and I believe that today the United States is committing
a grave error in building the wall on our border." Calderon said
the fence would be expensive to US taxpayers and lead to more Mexican
deaths.
"I don't believe that it will be useful for the purpose of building
a safer and more prosperous region in our security and prosperity partnership.
It's much more useful to solve common problems and to foster prosperity
of both countries," Calderon added.
Rights watchdog Amnesty International, in a statement released in Mexico
City, condemned the US move as "criminalizing migration (and) a
step backward on human rights."
AFP
26 1805 GMT 10 06
Copyright
©2006 AFP.
All Rights Reserved.
Send
this story to a friend
Your
feedback is important to us!
We invite all our readers to share with us
their views and comments about this article.
Write
to editor@petroleumworld.com
Any
question or suggestions, please write to:
editor@petroleumworld.com
Best
Viewed with IE
5.01+
Windows
NT 4.0, '95, '98 and ME +/ 800x600 pixels
|