Activists confront cops’ anti-immigrant actions
By
Gloria Rubac
Houston
Published May 28, 2009 9:28 PM
Immigrants and their supporters have marched, rallied, picketed and even met
with the mayor’s staff to express their opposition to the enforcing of
immigration laws by Houston cops.
Teodoro Aguiluz, executive director of CRECEN, the Central American Resource
Center, speaks out at May 20 protest.
WW photo: Gloria Rubac
|
At a May 20 press conference and picket line outside of the Houston Police
Officers Union, activists made it clear that immigrants were a large part of
the Houston population and must be treated with respect by all city
agencies.
Chanting, “What do we want? Civil rights! When do we want it? Now!”
protesters filled the sidewalks outside of the cops’ union headquarters.
The union president recently wrote an editorial calling on Houston Mayor Bill
White to do more to enforce immigration laws.
Judicial Watch, a right-wing organization that backs stricter immigration
policies, has announced it will sue the City of Houston to force it to step up
efforts to combat illegal immigration.
For 17 years the City of Houston and its cops did not enforce immigration laws.
That changed this year when Mayor White joined the U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement’s “287(g) program” which allows city jailers to
check criminal and immigration histories of people being booked into the two
city jails.
There has been a backlash against the mayor by immigrants and their advocates
against ICE’S 287(g) program, which makes Houston the only major-city
police force in Texas to allow police questioning of nonsuspects about their
citizenship status.
Longtime immigrant rights activist Maria Jimenez said she and other opponents
of 287(g) met with the mayor’s staff to express concerns. She said she
wasn’t assured that anyone facing a Class C misdemeanor, including
traffic tickets, wouldn’t be included.
“It could result in immigrants being hauled off to jail on minor
offenses,” Jimenez said. “What this policy would do is encourage
racial profiling in which any person who looks Latino would be far more likely
to be asked by cops if they are here legally.”
HPD Chief Harold Hurtt has said that while local police cooperate with federal
counterparts, once a noncitizen is jailed, HPD cannot be responsible for
enforcing immigration laws in Houston, which has an estimated undocumented
resident population of 250,000 to a half million.
Another demonstration outside the cops’ union office is planned for May
27. For information contact Cesar Espinoza at the Central American Resource
Center at 713-271-9703.
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