Reuters
August 18, 2015
The
head of U.S. Customs and Border Protection launched an advertising
campaign on Tuesday aimed at dissuading Central Americans from trying to
enter the United States
illegally and avoid the influx of the tens of thousands who tried to
come last year.
Commissioner
Gil Kerlikowske said the message of the campaign, which will appear on
television, radio stations, social media and posters in El Salvador,
Honduras and Guatemala,
is very simple.
"It
is very, very dangerous," Kerlikowske said of the journey at the launch
in San Diego. "And you are not going to be allowed to claim that you
are eligible (to remain
in the United States.)"
The
$1.2 million campaign, called "Know the Facts," emphasizes that U.S.
law and policy lead to immediate deportation and offer no relief for
undocumented immigrants.
"If
any one tells or promises you something different ... please don't
believe them," the announcers say. "Your deportation will be a
priority."
Last
year, nearly 80,000 people from the three Central American countries
made the journey across Mexico and into the United States, triggering a
humanitarian crisis.
About 63,000 were children, many traveling without their parents.
Kerlikowske
said the Border Patrol, immigration courts, detention facilities and
other organizations had struggled to cope with those unprecedented
numbers.
"I
watched Border Patrol agents cooking food, bringing clothes and toys
from home for these children," he said, praising how staff had sought to
make up for the lack of
resources.
While
many new arrivals were fleeing violence and poverty and had hoped to
stay with relatives already in the United States, Kerlikowske said those
who immigrate illegally
since July 2014 are prioritized for removal.
The commissioner said everyone needed to be aware of the dangers.
"There
are very few days that go by that we are not recovering the remains of
someone who tried to make that dangerous journey and died," he said.
Immigrant
rights groups back the efforts to raise awareness among those
considering the journey, both of the dangers along the way, and of being
sent back home again.
"Commissioner
Kerlikowske is focused on humane and respectful ways to inform folks
about the risks, and it's important to try to do that," said Rabbi
Laurie Coskey of
the Interfaith Center for Worker Justice.
"The stories of what people who made the journey had to endure that we are hearing are horrendous and terrifying."
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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