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News from Around the Americas | January 2007
Mexico Border Barrier Work Starts Associated Press
| A man looks up at the border fence separating the U.S. and Mexico south of San Diego in a file photo. U.S. immigration police have rounded up hundreds of criminal aliens in southern California, as part of one of their largest ever roundups of foreign lawbreakers and immigration violators, police said on Tuesday. (Fred Greaves/Reuters) | Construction began Wednesday on vehicle barriers that will be part of a mix of fencing along the Arizona-Mexico border to discourage illegal border crossings.
The construction is part of a Bush administration initative announced last year that aims to provide a mix of high-tech virtual fencing and a traditional physical barrier.
The first phase of construction will consist primarily of concrete-filled vertical tubes set into the ground to prevent vehicles from entering.
Department of Homeland Security spokesman Russell Knocke said some portions of the barrier may also contain traditional fencing.
The first phase will be placed along nine miles at the western edge of a 37-mile stretch of desert in southwestern Arizona.
On Jan. 12, Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff cleared the way for the work to start by waiving environmental regulations and laws impeding construction along the 2.8 million-acre Barry M. Goldwater bombing range.
Environmentalists have criticized the fencing and barrier plans, saying that won't stop people in search of jobs but will be a step toward destroying a fragile portion of southern Arizona's desert.
The initial construction phase could take a few months. |
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