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Long US-Mexican border defies attempts to close it off

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Central American migrants who ran into walls of security personnel, razor wire and tear gas at the US border in Tijuana, Mexico on Sunday chose possibly the hardest place to pass.

Just a few miles (kilometers) away high walls and dense patrolling give way to relatively easily scaled fencing. But even then, they would have faced rugged terrain and a stepped-up presence by US Border Patrol agents.

The 2,000 mile (3,200 kilometer) border from the Pacific Ocean to the Gulf of Mexico has long defied efforts to seal it off, due to a mix of politics and sheer geography.

In the 12 months to September 30, the US Customs and Border Protection apprehended or blocked 521,090 people from entering the country illegally. There are no good estimates of how many get through, but it is likely hundreds per day.

President Donald Trump has demanded the whole border be fenced, a near-impossible task.

Since 2006 the government has fenced off around 700 miles with vehicle barriers and fences, from eight to 30 feet (2.4 meters-9.1 meters) high.

Nearly all of that is in three states: California, New Mexico and Arizona, where the border is relatively straight and most of the land on the US side is government-owned.

The longest stretch, the Mexico border with Texas, is marked by the sinuous Rio Grande River, whose loops and bights make a border-hugging fence impractical. Moreover, most of the land along the border is privately owned, and many landowners object to fencing off their property from the river.

In addition, in some urban areas there is heavy traffic by people who cross the border every day for school, work and family business.

- Into a no-man's land -

The existing border wall  which acts as a levee with bollard fencing on top  pictured in March 2018 ...
The existing border wall, which acts as a levee with bollard fencing on top, pictured in March 2018 in the Rio Grande Valley sector near McAllen, Texas
Loren ELLIOTT, AFP

Nevertheless, at the beginning of 2018 Trump demanded Congress budget $25 billion to fence the entire border.

So far $1.6 billion has been allocated for new walls to be constructed in two areas with the heaviest populations.

One is at Tijuana, Mexico, where the caravan of several thousand Central American migrants is trying to pass to the San Diego, California area on the north side.

That is already one of the most difficult sections of the border to cross successfully, with two and sometimes three parallel fences, now reinforced with razor wire.

The 42 people US officials said were arrested Sunday crossing the border only breached a primary fence into a kind of no-man's-land on the US side, never reaching a second fence.

The second section being reinforced under Trump's wall program is the Rio Grande Valley, the easternmost stretch of the border near McAllen, Texas.

In between are large areas with no effective barriers. But searing deserts, towering mountains and brutal drug smugglers make passage a highly risky undertaking.

Increasingly, too, instead of walls the US has installed border lights and cameras and deployed drones for monitoring, increasing the chance of being caught.

Central American migrants who ran into walls of security personnel, razor wire and tear gas at the US border in Tijuana, Mexico on Sunday chose possibly the hardest place to pass.

Just a few miles (kilometers) away high walls and dense patrolling give way to relatively easily scaled fencing. But even then, they would have faced rugged terrain and a stepped-up presence by US Border Patrol agents.

The 2,000 mile (3,200 kilometer) border from the Pacific Ocean to the Gulf of Mexico has long defied efforts to seal it off, due to a mix of politics and sheer geography.

In the 12 months to September 30, the US Customs and Border Protection apprehended or blocked 521,090 people from entering the country illegally. There are no good estimates of how many get through, but it is likely hundreds per day.

President Donald Trump has demanded the whole border be fenced, a near-impossible task.

Since 2006 the government has fenced off around 700 miles with vehicle barriers and fences, from eight to 30 feet (2.4 meters-9.1 meters) high.

Nearly all of that is in three states: California, New Mexico and Arizona, where the border is relatively straight and most of the land on the US side is government-owned.

The longest stretch, the Mexico border with Texas, is marked by the sinuous Rio Grande River, whose loops and bights make a border-hugging fence impractical. Moreover, most of the land along the border is privately owned, and many landowners object to fencing off their property from the river.

In addition, in some urban areas there is heavy traffic by people who cross the border every day for school, work and family business.

– Into a no-man’s land –

The existing border wall  which acts as a levee with bollard fencing on top  pictured in March 2018 ...

The existing border wall, which acts as a levee with bollard fencing on top, pictured in March 2018 in the Rio Grande Valley sector near McAllen, Texas
Loren ELLIOTT, AFP

Nevertheless, at the beginning of 2018 Trump demanded Congress budget $25 billion to fence the entire border.

So far $1.6 billion has been allocated for new walls to be constructed in two areas with the heaviest populations.

One is at Tijuana, Mexico, where the caravan of several thousand Central American migrants is trying to pass to the San Diego, California area on the north side.

That is already one of the most difficult sections of the border to cross successfully, with two and sometimes three parallel fences, now reinforced with razor wire.

The 42 people US officials said were arrested Sunday crossing the border only breached a primary fence into a kind of no-man’s-land on the US side, never reaching a second fence.

The second section being reinforced under Trump’s wall program is the Rio Grande Valley, the easternmost stretch of the border near McAllen, Texas.

In between are large areas with no effective barriers. But searing deserts, towering mountains and brutal drug smugglers make passage a highly risky undertaking.

Increasingly, too, instead of walls the US has installed border lights and cameras and deployed drones for monitoring, increasing the chance of being caught.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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