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     HispanicVista Columnists - May 16th, 2005

     Guest Columns - May 16th, 2005
Seal the border theory is a false illusion
Get real about migrant workers
By Patrick Osio, Jr./HispanicVista.com
May 16, 2005

 

The “secure the border” theory goes something like this: Build a series of three parallel fences with barbed wire separated by “no-man’s zone”; stadium type lighting and ground sensors; sufficient Border Patrol and military troops to swiftly react to any intrusion. This will only allow passage through controlled ports-of-entry. Does the theory guarantee to stop the intrusions? An examination of similar or identical theories actually put in practice sheds some light.
In the similar category falls the Berlin Wall attempting to keep people in not out. The wall was well lit; there was barbed wire and plenty of military personnel. It was effective, as more were killed than got out over or through the wall. The South and North Korean no-man’s land fences separating the two countries is another similar barrier. This particular zone also has thousands of land mines between fences to discourage trespassing.

By Kevin R. Johnson
     A few weeks ago, the Minutemen, whom President Bush has called "vigilantes," massed at the Mexican border in southern
Arizona with the support of, among others, arch-restrictionist Pat Buchanan. A California legislator has proposed an initiative that would create the California Border Police. Through the Real ID Act, Congress has tightened the vise on immigrants, mandating state driver's license requirements, making asylum claims tougher to prove and fortifying the border fence with Mexico.
    Although immigration regulation is a federal, not a state, function, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has entered the immigration imbroglio. After backtracking on his statement last month about the need to "close the border" with Mexico, the governor recently endorsed the work of the Minutemen on Los Angeles talk show radio. In 2003, Schwarzenegger was catapulted into office by opposing the law allowing undocumented immigrants to obtain driver's licenses passed by the Legislature. Following his election, the Legislature repealed the law.

Kooks and the Constitution Revamping California-Mexico Relations: A call for public policy beyond racism and benign neglect
By Raoul Lowery Contreras/HispanicVista.com
May 16, 2005
 
   It seems that every new California political cycle creates an "out from under the rocks" scenario that draws California political kooks into sunlight.
           This time it is State legislator Ray Haynes (Murrieta/North San Diego County) who is spearheading another unconstitutional grab for police powers that must frighten all Americans. The proper word is constitutional "usurpation" or what friendly Germans would call a constitutional "putsch."
           The GRAB: Haynes’ proposal to go to the ballot to set up a special state police unit that will patrol the border and hound California employers and their employees looking for illegal resident workers. They will have to be everywhere, in every business, in every residence and on every street for there are an estimated 3-4-million illegals in California.
By Armando Vazquez-Ramos
"Close the borders in California and all across Mexico and in the United States. Because I think it is just unfair to have all those people coming across, have the borders open the way it is, and have this kind of lax situation."- - California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s xenophobic remarks on April 19, 2005 at the annual meeting of the Newspaper Association of America in San Francisco, California.
     With this comment, the current governor of California brought to a boiling point the perception that California-Mexico relations have seriously deteriorated and that neither public policy nor neighborly relations exist between our State and our foremost business partner: Mexico.
     The embarrassed governor was quick to blame his poor English skills, as he explained the next day at a news conference that he intended to say the US-Mexico border should be secured, not closed. "Yesterday was a total screw-up in the words I used. Because instead of closing, I meant securing. I think maybe my English, I need to go back to school and study a little bit."
Your Papers Please! Silencing every voice with which we disagree is profoundly un-American.
By Steven J. Ybarra, JD/HispanicVista.com
May 16, 2005

Notas por La Casa Politica

On May 6th 134 years ago, peons in Mexico celebrated the May 5th clobbering of a French invader who, like all invaders, overstayed his welcome.  This year Americans are in the process of getting clobbered by a bunch of Iraqi peons who do not like the fact that we have invaded and overstayed our welcome. You see the Iraqis believe that they are patriots!  It is all about your point of view.
It has been a fun year watching the fascists get ready to destroy our rights; they truly believe that we cannot be trusted with democracy.  A report has finally surfaced that shows that Bush the Lesser planned to invade Iraq as early as Summer 2002. The report shows that the research, investigations, and intelligence about Iraq were to be written to support the policy of invasion. 

By Judith F. Baca

An anti-illegal immigrant group SaveOurState of Ventura County emboldened by their recent victory at the removal of a billboard referring to Los Angeles, Mexico is now demanding the removal of a twelve-year-old monument in Baldwin Park entitled Danzas Indigenous. I was commissioned to produce this work in 1993 by MTA and the City of Baldwin Park as collaboration with Kate Diamond architectural group.

The monument consists of a 20 ft arch, 100 ft plaza and 400 ft train platform. Produced with extensive public input the monument includes five languages: English, Spanish, Gabrielino, Chumash, Luisueno and is a layering of indigenous, Spanish, mestizo history, which is associated with this site.

I’m Playing the Space Card: Imposters Inhabit the U.S. Immigration Policy Reform Debate Bakala Victim Of Anti-Immigration Campaign
By Bill Dahl/HispanicVista.com
May 16, 2005
Alien Abduction
            They’re among us. I can’t stand it anymore. I’m playing the space card.
            Have you ever seen one of those science fiction movies where aliens from another planet take over the physical bodies of unsuspecting earthlings? Somehow, the unsuspecting person is snatched up and beamed aboard some sort of spacecraft where the transformation takes place. (I’ve never been on one of these ships but I sure would like to get a look at the inside of one). When they’re returned to earth, they look exactly the same as before they were abducted. The abductees typically have no near-term recollection of what has happened to them. Yet, they behave quite differently. Let me explain:
By Robert Miranda
     While there are illegal immigrants living in Wisconsin, let us not forget they’re here because Corporate America hires them because they provide cheap labor. Everybody knows this - including the government – and only the Republican Party is doing something about it. Unfortunately, the Grand ol’ Party (GOP) and some spineless Democrats are moving in a direction that is causing more harm than good. Take for example, the case of Regina Bakala.
     Regina Bakala is a 43-year-old mother of two children residing in Hales Corners, Wisconsin. The United States government is moving to deport Regina to the Congo, her native land.  If Regina is sent back to the Congo, she will most certainly face death.
     Her past political activism in that country, as a pro-democracy advocate, makes her a threat to the dictatorship fighting to stay in power in the Congo.
The Latino/a Experience in the United States: The Literary Truth of the 21st Century USCRI Applauds Comprehensive Immigration Reform - Urges White House Support
By Manuel Hernandez/HispanicVista.com
May 16, 2005
 
          When students make a connection to literature, they stay awake (intellectually and mentally). When a Latino teen (born and raised in the United States of Latino parents or recently arrived from Latin America) reads a story, poem, drama or novel that is far away from the student's personal, social and cultural background, the opposite occurs. The greatest secret of success is to come to understand identity, and how it intertwines with everyday living, reality and existence. The Latino/a experience in the United States is a literary truth that helps students have a close encounter with literature because their day to day experiences are reflected in its texts.
     The connection to literature is dumbfounded when Latino teens are isolated in classrooms and are separated from the mainstream (current classroom practice in many schools across America).
     The US Committee for Refugees and Immigrants (USCRI) applauds the introduction of comprehensive immigration reform legislation and urges the President to quickly back this bi-partisan effort to bring our immigration system into the 21st Century.
     Today, senators McCain (R-AZ) and Kennedy (D-MA), along with representatives Kolbe (R-AZ), Flake (R-AZ), and Gutierrez (D-IL), will introduce legislation to permit carefully screened applicants to study and work in the United States. The legislation would require undocumented workers already in the United States to pay a penalty, and then apply for work authorization. After six years of lawful presence, they could apply for permanent residence. The bill would allow undocumented students who have been studying in the United States to participate in the program with proof of enrollment in schools or universities. The bill would also allow workers outside the United States, with proof of employment or an employment offer, to pay $500 at local consulates to apply for a visa. The work visas would not tie the workers to any particular employer or economic sector, a major innovation for migrant labor rights.
Is there still hope? Can families stay together? A Golden Moment
By Erika Robles
May 16, 2005

     In 1994, section 245(i) was added to immigration law. Under this provision, a person who –if it weren't for his or her illegal status - would qualify to immigrate (for instance, a spouse of a U.S. citizen), may adjust status in the United States –after having paid a fine- without having to go to their home country to do so.
     However, Congress allowed this section to expire in November 1997. In December 2000 –while President Clinton was in office- the Legal Immigration and Family Equity Act (LIFE) and LIFE Act Amendment of section 245(i) was passed and signed into law. Instead of a full restoration of section 245(i), it merely provided a short four-month in which eligible immigrants could apply to adjust their status while in the U.S. as long as they could pay the $1,000 fine.

By Robert Miranda

You’ve got to love the reaction on the faces of these Marquette students that was plastered on the front page of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (Gold: Pan it or dig it, May 4, 2005). After the announcement by Marquette University president, Father Robert A. Wild of the school’s name change to GOLD, the pro-Warrior advocates stood there perplexed and dumbfounded.
I particularly love the reaction of the young man in the baseball cap behind the flabbergasted guy with his hands on his hips, next to the student who appears to have had a premonition and was already dressed like a gold nugget. Talk about a “Kodak moment”.
The smiling young man with the baseball cap leaves me with the impression of his satisfaction that poetic justice was handed to the insensitive reactionary actions of a few who simply ignored the concerns of American Indians.

 
Paycheck to Paycheck Xilonen: Rites of Passage
By Domingo Ivan  Casañas/HispanicVista.com
May 16, 2005
I recently read in Hispanic magazine that 78% of our Latino population is living paycheck to paycheck.  I felt that this number was quite high so I went out to research this situation.  I found out that the high percentage comes from a Met Life 2003 Employee Benefits Trend Study conducted during the third quarter of 2003.
I decided to take my own survey and ask the same question of our East Contra Costa Hispanics.  Since I am not shy it was easy to start a conversation at the local Home Depot and Wal-Mart with many Hispanics.  I was actually surprised to not only hear that so many are living paycheck to paycheck but also how many are barely just getting by.
Column of the Americas
By Patrisia Gonzales
Xochitl Rivera prepared her life for a whole year when she became like tender corn, or Xilonen. She was called this because she was about to ripen into a maiden. She underwent a year-long rite of passage that combined both an indigenous ceremony with a quinceañera. A growing custom among Chicanas practicing indigenous traditions is that of the Xilonen ceremony. Xilonen in the Aztec cosmovision or philosophy represents the spirit of tender corn similar to corn maiden.
"When you're a Xilonen, your are going from a seed and you're growing, growing until you become like a corn. There's going to be lots of changes and your going to go through a lot, "recalled Rivera, now a young woman in her twenties.
The Fly On The Wall Mexican Trade Office in San Francisco: Building business links between California and Mexico.
By Richard N. Baldwin T. /HispanicVista.com
May 16, 2005
 

     Actually, there are two flies in two houses. One house is called the White House and the other house is called the House White (translated from the Spanish). In the White House, in Washington, on a big desk is a red telephone. This phone is for very important calls. In the House White, in México City, on a somewhat smaller desk is a yellow telephone also for very important calls. The red phone is colored, as are important things, like fire engines and so on. The yellow phone is because Mexicans like that orangey yellow a lot. Some call it "Mexican Yellow" and that color is used all over the place in México. The two flies that are going to listen to the telephone calls are secret agents from your dedicated writer's organization.
 The yellow phone rings:
"Vince here.”
"W here.”
By Bernardo Méndez 
   We know that Latino population is growing fast in the US and we are close to 40 million people now, a market that is about the same size of the whole Mexican Market of 105 millions. What we have to know is that California is the leading state in Latino and Mexican population and nearly one million businesses and companies belong to Latino entrepreneurs. According to a recent book by Professor David Hayes-Bautista of UCLA Latino Children born in California make now more than half of California births and very soon -maybe in a couple of years- Latino students will be majority in k-12 public school system, his own book title is a simbolic statement of Spanish presence in California and USA: "La Nueva California: Latinos in the Golden State" by University of California Press, 2004. 
     Of the 40 million Latinos in the USA, Mexican descent population make more than 25 million of which more than 10 million live and work in California. The San Francisco Bay Area including San Francisco, Oakland, all East Bay, San Jose, Stockton and Sacramento has close to 2 million Latinos...
The Expedition of 1781: The Founding of Los Angeles Great and Medium Powers in the Age of Unipolarity
History
By John P. Schmal/HispanicVista.com
Most people living in Los Angeles today have probably never heard of the Expedition of 1781.  However, if this expedition had not taken place or fulfilled its objectives, Los Angeles would not be 224 years old this year.  This expedition of almost a thousand miles founded a small pueblo on the outskirts of the extensive Spanish Empire. That small pueblo, now known as Los Angeles, would eventually form the nucleus of a thriving multi-ethnic, multicultural urban center with a population of almost 10 million people. 
In 1774, King Carlos III of Spain had authorized the settlement of the California communities we call San Gabriel, Los Angeles, and Santa Barbara.  He believed that the establishment of pueblos, missions and presidios in these areas would serve as a bulwark against the looming threat of the Russian and British empires, both of which were moving closer to California.

Drafted By: Federico Bordonaro
Power and Interest News Report (PINR

Recent developments in the international relations arena such as the new Sino-Indian cooperation agreements and the Russo-German strategic deals, both from April 2005, call for a theoretical interpretation in the context of the current phase of world affairs. These relationships are often defined as "strategic partnerships." A strategic partnership can be explained as a bilateral relationship with the main function being to facilitate the increase of power (at first in absolute terms) of the two states involved. In this sense, it differs both from a classical security-oriented alliance and from political and economic integration processes such as the European Union.
Strategic partnerships are not necessarily directed against a common rival, contrary to classical alliances. The main reasons for forging these latter alliances have always been security concerns and the seeking of a balance of power. Security was, therefore, the elemental concept in this kind of relationship.

Patrick Osio, Jr. has written a short but intensive manual on the Mexican perspective on numerous issues between our two countries. The manual is an in depth primer on the culture and protocol for better understanding Mexicans that in turn allows establishing personal and business relationships, and how to avoid the most common faux pas that can ruin relationships and business deals.

  • About the author

  • Table of Contents

  • Excerpts from the manual

  • The manual is available through Electronic delivery for $9.95 making it possible to download the manual to save on your hard drive, printing its entirety or particular sections while reaping considerable savings over printed copies.

    Op-Ed & NEWS, May 16th, 2005

    Show Me Your Papers
    By Robert Dreyfuss
         In the wake of 9/11, a renewed push was launched for a bad, old idea: a national ID card. The Big Brother-style idea, scary to most Americans, was repeatedly rejected in the past, especially in the 1970s and 1980s, and polls show that it isn’t favored now. Led by Newt Gingrich and other authoritarian personalities, including Oracle’s Larry Ellison—who offered free software—there was an overt effort after 9/11 to enact it into law, but it died when it became clear that enthusiasm in Congress was lacking. Since then, backers reverted to a sly campaign to establish a “back door” national ID system, building on the idea of a single, national database of drivers licenses. In 2004, the chief sponsor of the latest effort, Rep. F. James Sensenbrenner, R.-Wis., tried to include it in last year’s intelligence bill—but he failed then, too.
     
    Governor's stance on illegal immigration might backfire - Rhetoric could rally votes against him
    By Timm Herdt
    Ventura County Star
     
    Politics-watchers from all points on the left-right spectrum are trying to figure out what Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger had in mind late last month when he picked up his cell phone, called a Los Angeles talk-radio show and praised the work of volunteer border patrols in Arizona called the Minutemen.
    "I think they have done a terrific job," Schwarzenegger said.
    With that, the immigrant governor jumped into perhaps California's most volatile political issue, one that erupted 11 years ago during a political campaign...
    What’s Wrong With President Bush’s Gang of Seven
    By Nan Aron
    Roll Call
    She worked for 30 years at a California hospital before having to take disability leave. But when 60-year-old Joan Stevenson felt well enough to return, the hospital turned her away.
    The evidence was clear: age discrimination, something explicitly outlawed by the California Legislature. Stevenson sued. Each of the California Supreme Court justices agreed with her.
    Well, all but one.
    Justice Janice Rogers Brown didn’t dispute the charge of age discrimination. She just felt the legislature shouldn’t prohibit it. “Discrimination based on age,” she wrote, “is the unavoidable consequence of ... time.”
    Op-Ed Contributors
    Before the Flood
    By Sujatha Byravan and Sudhir Chella Rajan
    New York Times
    Cambridge, Mass. —. One of the paradoxes of global warming is that developing countries, which were not responsible for most of the greenhouse gas emissions that are changing the climate and did not reap the benefits of industrialization, will bear the brunt of the consequences. One of these consequences will be rising seas, which in turn will generate a surge of "climate exiles" who have been flooded out of their homes in poor countries. How should those of us in rich countries deal with this wave of immigrants? The fairest solution: allowing the phased immigration of people living in vulnerable regions according to a formula that is tied to the host country's cumulative contributions to global warming.
    Los Angeles County labor chief dies
    Miguel Contreras, 53, suffers apparent heart attack
    By Rick Orlov
    (Los Angeles) Daily News Staff Writer


    Friday, May 06, 2005 - Miguel Contreras, the Los Angeles labor chief who rose from the ranks of Cesar Chavez's farm labor movement to head one of the most powerful unions in the nation, died Friday of an apparent heart attack, officials said. He was 53.

    Contreras, as executive secretary-treasurer of the Los Angeles County Federation of Labor AFL-CIO, took control of the umbrella organization of unions and built it into a potent political force that today includes more than 300 affiliates and 800,000 members and wields enormous influence across Southern California.
    Pope Re-Commits to Peace and Human Rights

    VATICAN CITY, MAY 12, 2005 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI confirmed his commitment to peace and the defense of fundamental human rights, in an address to the Diplomatic Corps Accredited to the Holy See.

    Speaking today to ambassadors from the 174 countries that have full diplomatic relations with the Holy See, the new Pope confirmed the commitments he made in his first message to the world, read in the Sistine Chapel on April 20, the day after his election.

    The Holy Father said he regards the issues of peace and human rights as particularly important because of his experience as a youth in Germany, where he was a victim of Nazi oppression, and witness of the division caused by communism.
    Bill would tighten border security, increase information sharing
    By Shawn Zeller
    GovExec
    Immigration reform legislation introduced Thursday would boost border security and interior enforcement of immigration laws while at the same time reducing the flow of illegal immigrants by offering them visas to work in the United States, according to a bipartisan group of House and Senate sponsors.
    To carry out the mandates, the Homeland Security, Labor, and State departments and the Social Security Administration would take on significant new responsibilities.
    The bill, the 2005 Secure America and Orderly Immigration Act, would allow illegal immigrants who pay fines and fees of at least $2,000, take English and civics courses, and undergo medical and background checks, to apply for green cards and eventually citizenship.
    No Real Debate for Real ID
    By Kim Zetter
    Wired.com
     
        Hundreds of civil liberties groups, immigrant support groups and government associations oppose the Real ID Act, a piece of legislation that critics say would produce a de facto national ID card, cost states millions of dollars and punish undocumented immigrants.
        Yet despite widespread opposition to the bill, it passed through the House last week and is expected to easily pass through the Senate on Tuesday.
        The legislation is raising questions not only about privacy and costs but about the ways in which critical legislation gets passed in Congress.
     
    Homeland security agency evaluates border needs
    By Chris Strohm
    GovExec.com
         The U.S. Border Patrol is doing a comprehensive assessment of every mile of the nation's borders to determine what resources and personnel it needs, a top homeland security official said.
    "Over the last few years, the Border Patrol has gained better control over larger areas of our border, certainly than we had before," Customs and Border Protection Commissioner Robert Bonner told Government Executive. "But we don't have the degree of control we need to have."
         While the assessment is being done, the Border Patrol will continue an aggressive campaign to gain control over an outlaw area in western Arizona that has been overrun with drug smugglers and illegal immigration, regardless of how long it takes, Bonner added.
    Immigration Measure Introduced
    By Darryl Fears
    Washington Post Staff Writer
     
         A bipartisan bill introduced in Congress yesterday seeks to revise the current immigration system by allowing millions of illegal immigrants in the United States to apply to be temporary guest workers and permit residents of other countries to seek the same status if they can prove that a job is waiting for them.
         The new visa program proposed by Sens. John McCain (R-Ariz.) and Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.) would allow immigrant workers to leave and enter the United States as they please over the three-year life of the temporary visa.
          McCain said current immigration policy is "unacceptable," in part because it forces Mexican nationals and others...
    Hospitals to Get Funds for ER Care - Southland facilities are expected to receive $35million to help cover the cost of treating uninsured illegal immigrants.
    By Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar, Times Staff Writer
    Hospitals in California are expected to receive a large portion of the money earmarked by the federal government for facilities whose finances are strained by the cost of providing emergency room care for illegal immigrants.
    Hospitals can begin applying today for the funds under a four-year, $1-billion program announced Monday by the Department of Health and Human Services.
    California hospitals are in line to receive more than any other state — nearly $71 million in the first year of the program, or about 30% of the initial national allocation of $250 million. Funds are distributed based on a state's percentage of undocumented immigrants and on the number of apprehensions of individuals in the state illegally.
     
    Inherited problems plague immigration enforcement agencies, GAO finds
    By Chris Strohm
    GovExec
    Several management problems that doomed the former Immigration and Naturalization Service live on in security agencies responsible for enforcing the nation's immigration laws, a top government auditor recently said.
    INS was dismantled after the Sept. 11 attacks, when the Homeland Security Department was created and the bureaus of Customs and Border Protection and Immigration and Customs Enforcement took over enforcing immigration laws. CBP is responsible for inspections and border patrol, while ICE is in charge of investigations, intelligence, and detention and removal operations.
     
    Migrant Trail Bears Witness to Human Rights Crisis
    Migrant Trail Walk Committee 
    Tucson, AZ-  On May 30, 2005, a diverse group of individuals will begin a 75-mile walk to call attention to the human rights crisis that is occurring on our borders.  The Migrant Trail: We Walk for Life is a joint endeavor of community groups and individuals, including Migrant Trail Walk Committee, Christian Peacemaker Team, Derechos Humanos/Alianza Indígena Sin Fronteras, and o More Deaths.  The walk will begin in Sásabe, Sonora and arrive at Kennedy Park on Sunday, June 5th for a closing ceremony.
     
    “We call for action now to prevent the tragic deaths of migrants in the desert,” says Hector Suarez of No More Deaths. “Thousands of men, women, and children have died due to border militarization and unjust immigration and international economic policies. These deaths must stop.”
     
    US tourism ‘losing billions because of image’
    By Amy Yee
    FT.com
     
    The US is losing billions of dollars as international tourists are deterred from visiting the US because of a tarnished image overseas and more bureaucratic visa policies, travel industry leaders have warned.
    “It's an economic imperative to address these problems,” said Roger Dow, chief executive of the Travel Industry Association of America, tourism's main trade body, which concluded its annual convention this weekend in New York.
    Mr. Dow stressed that tourism contributed to a positive perception of the US, which spread across to business. “If we don't address these issues in tourism, the long-term impact for American brands Coca-Cola, General Motors, McDonald's could be very damaging,” he said.
     
    Two interesting articles related to immigration reform.
    From: Pedro Celis, Ph.D.
    Republican National Hispanic Assembly
    The first is about the grass roots effort that the Catholic Church is undertaking to promote support for comprehensive immigration reform.
    In it, a spokesperson from FAIR (an anti-immigration group) is quoted as stating that there is little support among voters for comprehensive immigration reform.
    But the second article from RollCall included here is about an extensive poll showing that there is wide spread support for immigration reform that is not "enforcement-only". Quoting from that report:
     
    Place Names Narrate Migrants' Saga
    Unusual trees and rocks are both landmarks and warnings for those who cross border illegally.
    By Richard Marosi,
     The scrub oak tree that marks the human smuggling trail into California invites migrants to rest from the arduous mountain crossing. Weary men, women and children drink from water bottles and seek shade from the searing sun.
    When the migrants sit back — still facing a six-hour hike to the border — the bandits pounce.
    They steal the migrants' meager belongings and strip off their clothing looking for money stitched into the seams. The underwear is then tossed into the branches.
    Baja California News
    NAFTA Commission to Review Baja Ecology complaint

    The Montreal-based Commission for Environmental Cooperation (CEC) has agreed to review a binational citizen complaint against a natural gas re-gasification terminal planned for a zone off the coast of Baja California. Pursued by environmental groups and activists from Mexico and the United States, the complaint charges that a terminal slated
    near the Coronado Islands threatens the breeding grounds of the endangered seabird Xantu's Murrelet and other species considered at risk. The submitters of the complaint include Greenpeace Mexico; The Center for Biological Diversity, Alfonso Aguirre; Shay Wolf; American Bird Conservancy; Los Angeles Audobon Society; Pacific Environment and Resources Center; and Wildcoast.
    Warning on Counterfeit Pharmaceuticals Purchased in Mexico-
    FDA and Mexican federal health officials Investigations of illegal pharmaceuticals & counterfeits cause suspension of 19 pharmacies
    -- 105 tons of medicines confiscated or recalled

    COSTA MESA CA USA -- MEDICAL INDUSTRY E-MAIL NEWS SERVICE(TM) -- MAY 12 2005 -- On May 10 2005, the FDA issued a warning about the sale of counterfeit versions of Lipitor, Viagra, and an unapproved product allegedly promoted as "generic Evista" to US consumers at pharmacies in Mexican border towns.

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