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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkEditorials | Issues | December 2006 

Mexico Decries Abuses of Migrant Workers
email this pageprint this pageemail usE. Eduardo Castillo - Associated Press


Migrant child workers collect onions during a harvest. Millions of child laborers and adolescent workers around the world face routine violence at their jobs, ranging from verbal abuse to rape or murder, the International Labour Organisation (ILO) said this week. (Reuters/Umit Bektas)
Mexican President Felipe Calderon acknowledged Wednesday that many of the illegal migrants from Central and South America who pass through Mexico on their way to the United States are abused by criminals and by authorities.

Pledging to ensure that the rights of Mexicans abroad are protected, he also acknowledged responsibility for migrants in Mexico.

"Just as we demand respect for the human rights of our countrymen, we have the ethical and legal responsibility to respect the human rights and the dignity of those who come from Central and South America and who cross our southern border," Calderon said during the presentation of human rights awards to several Mexican activists.

"Migrants from Central and South America who cross through our national territory also suffer abuses, extortion and are victims of crime, many times with the complicity of authorities."

The number of undocumented migrants detained in Mexico rose from 138,061 in 2002 to 240,269 in 2005. Forty-two percent were Guatemalan, 33 percent Honduran and most of the rest Salvadoran.

Calderon also reiterated a promise to work toward strengthening the economy so that Mexico "is not the origin of migration, but soon the destination for investment."

The president, who took office on Dec. 1, has promised to follow up on the promise of his predecessor, Vicente Fox, to pursue an accord with the United States that would allow millions of Mexicans to legally enter and work north of the border.

Calderon, a native of central state of Michoacan, which sends a large number of migrants to the U.S. each year, noted that "like many ... I have cousins, uncles, in-laws who are undocumented and live in the United States."

President Bush, who championed a temporary guest-worker program for migrant Mexicans, signed a law in October that would erect 700 miles of fence along the border as an immigration-control measure.

The measure has drawn widespread criticism from Mexico and migrants-rights activists.

"Never in history have walls stopped migration or the integration of countries and regions," Calderon said.



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