'Minuteman' activists fan out along border
April 3, 2005
By MICHAEL RILEY The Denver Post
SOURCE:
TOMBSTONE, Ariz. — Closely watched by nervous governments on both sides of the
border, hundreds of anti-immigrant activists fanned out into the desert of
southern Arizona Saturday, launching a self-styled citizen patrol to spot
illegal immigrants sneaking into the United States.
The 400 or so volunteers of what's known as the Minuteman Project got an
enthusiastic send-off from U.S. Rep. Tom Tancredo, R-Colo., one of the
nation's harshest critics of immigration policy.
Tancredo dismissed critics who say the activists are taking the law into their
own hands.
"We are saying to our government, 'please enforce the law.' That's not a
radical idea, that's not a vigilante idea," said Tancredo, who got a standing
ovation Friday at a packed orientation meeting before the patrols began.
"It's an American concept," he said.
On the Mexican side of the border, patrols of soldiers were trying Saturday to
dissuade immigrants from crossing into areas east of Tucson, Ariz., that the
activists plan to patrol.
On the U.S. side, the Border Patrol said it didn't want the activists' help.
"We don't support this; we don't condone it," said Andrea Zortman, a Border
Patrol spokesman. "We feel they are going to be more of a hindrance to our job
than a help."
None of that dampened the enthusiasm of the participants, some from as far
away as Florida and New York, who descended on the border town of Tombstone in
RVs and rental cars, trailed by scores of reporters and a dozen satellite TV
trucks.
Over the next month, participants will staff fixed outposts and conduct roving
patrols. Organizers say that many will be armed. They have strict instructions
not to stop or harm immigrants, only to report them to the Border Patrol.
In a series of rallies meant to christen the event, speakers compared it to
the Boston Tea Party and quoted Thomas Jefferson. Some participants gave their
names to reporters as John Hancock and Samuel Adams.
Sensing a political opportunity, a congressional candidate from California
stumped for votes.
"We're done writing letters; we're done making phone calls and showing up at
meetings. It doesn't work. What we're doing in the next 30 days is good
old-fashioned activism," said Chris Simcox, one of the event's co-founders.
Critics have complained that leaders will have difficulty controlling the
actions of what's eventually expected to be more than 1,000 participants.
Although organizers say they are screening out members of hate groups, the
project has been highlighted on the Aryan Nations' website, and human rights
groups say a neo-Nazi organization, the National Alliance, has been handing
out fliers in the border town of Douglas, Ariz., in support of the patrol.
In Tombstone, tourists who came to watch the daily re-enactment of the famous
shootout at the OK Corral gawked instead at rallies and counterprotests.
Some patrollers sported camouflage clothing and body armor while
counterdemonstrators banged pans and waved signs, denouncing the event as
racist.
"We have the Border Patrol. We have the FBI. We don't need these yahoos coming
from all over the country like this," Tombstone resident Robin Friestad said.
But organizers characterized the patrols as a form of political protest. They
stressed that the sole intent was to draw attention to the country's porous
southern border. Guided by smugglers, illegal immigrants cross into the U.S.
through the shrub and cactus of the Arizona desert each day by the thousands.
Many participants said that the illicit migration is transforming towns and
cities all over the country. Most carried personal stories along with a
powerful conviction that the federal government has refused to do what it
takes to enforce the country's borders.
Robert Thatcher, from Orange County, Calif., said that this year, he was
closing the roofing business he's owned and operated for more than 25 years.
"My competitors are using illegal aliens, and I refuse to. I can't match their
(lower) costs, and so it's either quit or wait around until I go bankrupt,"
said Thatcher, who planned to begin patrolling Sunday afternoon.
But for every rally Saturday by Minuteman Project participants there was a
counterprotest, some led by nationally prominent Latino activists. At one
point, the two groups waved signs across the road from each other in front of
the Border Patrol station in Douglas as sheriff's deputies and armed
immigration agents looked on.
After more than two hours, Jerry Duehr, a retiree and Minuteman Project
participant from Arizona, walked across the road with a cooler, pulled out a
can of Coke and offered it to the leader of the counterdemonstrators, Armando
Navarro, a college professor from California.
"He believes strongly in what he's doing, just like we believe strongly in
what we're doing. I think he's probably a decent person," Duehr said.
===============
UPDATES: MINUTEMAN PROJECT
Results 1 - 10 of about 1,150 for MINUTEMAN PROJECT
Minutemen aside, some migrants undeterred
Houston Chronicle - 57 minutes ago
... The flier, which has been distributed by Mexican migrant-aid groups,
refers to the so-called Minuteman Project, a month-long operation in which
citizens from ...
http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/world/3115344
Mexican mother, child found in gas tank
WFAA (subscription), TX - 1 hour ago
... Many of the marchers were part of the Minuteman Project, which has brought
volunteers from around the country to patrol the Arizona-Mexico border
throughout ...
http://www.wfaa.com/sharedcontent/dws/news/texassouthwest/stories/040305dntexcreative.537bd.html
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