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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkNews Around the Republic of Mexico | April 2008 

Mexican Lawmakers Decriminalize Migrants
email this pageprint this pageemail usMark Stevenson - Associated Press
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Every three days, 300 to 500 migrants swarm the freight train in Arriaga for the 20-day journey to the northern border. Hundreds of people have been maimed after falling under the wheels of the trains. (Adriana Zehbrauskas/NYTimes)
 
Mexico City - Migrant rights activists applauded a vote by Mexico's Congress to remove long-standing criminal penalties for undocumented migrants found in the country.

The measure passed unanimously in the lower house on Tuesday, a day after Senate approval. President Felipe Calderon's office declined to say whether he would sign the popular measure into law.

Mexican lawmakers saw the harsh penalties as an anachronism, and some noted Mexico also owes migrants better treatment.

Immigrants here, mostly Central Americans trying to reach the U.S., are often robbed, mistreated and subject to extortion by bandits and even police.

"It is very positive that they have removed the criminal penalties from the current law," said Karina Arias, the spokeswoman for Sin Fronteras, a Mexican group that promotes rights for migrants in Mexico. "It is a big step forward."

Current law lays out punishments of 1 1/2 to 6 years, while the new measure makes undocumented immigration a minor offense punishable by fines equivalent to about US$475 (euro300) to US$2,400 (euro1,535).

Some Mexican officials acknowledged that the current harsh penalties weakened Mexico's position in arguing for better treatment of its own migrants in the United States.

Arias said Mexico "is in a much better position" after voting for eliminating prison terms that are seldom enforced anyway. Most undocumented migrants caught in Mexico are simply deported.

Congresswoman Irma Pineiro of the small New Alliance Party said Mexico has a moral duty to protect migrants.

"Mexico is politically and morally obligated to treat migrants with dignity and to make a commitment to human rights, as a country that both exports and receives migrants," he said.



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