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Guest Column |
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Black Leaders to Investigate Human Rights Violations on U.S.-Mexico Border |
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A group of African American leaders are traveling to the U.S.-Mexico Border this month to investigate the violations of human rights of migrants. The Black Alliance for Just Immigration (BAJI) is sponsoring "Braving Borders, Building Bridges: A Journey for Human Rights," an African American tour of the border in Tucson, Arizona and Sonora, Mexico border region, April 26-29, 2007. The main goal of the tour is to investigate the human rights violations against documented and undocumented immigrants crossing the border into the United States as well as the violations against U.S. citizens. BAJI, a San Francisco Bay Area organization, is organizing the tour in cooperation with Coalicion de Derechos Humanos (the Coalition for Human Rights), a Tucson-based organization and the National Network for Immigrant and Refuge Rights based in Oakland, Calif. "We are appalled by the increasing militarization of the border areas and the reports of rising migrant deaths, detentions of immigrants without due process, and violence against people attempting to cross the Mexican desert into the United States," said Rev. Phil Lawson, a United Methodist minister and co-founder of BAJI. "As African Americans, we understand the racism and scapegoating directed towards immigrants that are prevalent in U.S. society today." The tour is led by Rev. Lawson, who is also a co-founder and co-chair of the California Interfaith Coalition for Immigrant Rights, and Rev. Kelvin Sauls, an immigrant from South Africa who is a BAJI co-founder and the Director of Congregational Development for the General Board of Discipleship of The United Methodist Church. The delegates include a cross section of African Americans from six states and ten cities, including ministers and representatives of faith-based organizations, labor representatives, academics, political leaders, and community activists. The BAJI delegation will meet with human rights activists, representatives of faith communities, labor organizations, county officials and elected leaders, and representatives of Native American tribes in Arizona. The group will also travel to Mexico to meet with human rights activists, representatives of faith communities, and migrants preparing to cross the border or who have been recently deported. Immediately after the tour, the delegation will hold a media briefing in Tucson to present its initial findings and recommendations. When the delegates return home, they will share their findings with their communities. The sponsoring organizations will also issue a full report in June that will be presented to the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Human Rights of Migrants.
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