español

CASA hosts and educates activists about social justice issues in Oaxaca and Chiapas.

Subscribe to our email Newsletter:

We share lessons we learn from the resistance movements in Mexico with our home communities. We publish news and analysis in our newsletter, host workshops, short-term solidarity delegations, and speaking events. Find out how to join us.

Multimedia

La lucha sigue three years after the assassination of Lorenzo Sampablo Cervantes-husband and father of four-who was assassinated on August 22, 2006 by paramilitary troops under the orders of...

See video

Originally posted to Narco News on 10/25/08, documents the use of force by the Mexican military against the people of Xoxocotla, Morelos, with equipment supplied by the U.S. as...

See video

A documentary that portrays the stories of undocumented Mexicans living in Richmond, Va., a journey that their American friend took to their home village in Morelos and the reality of crossing the U.S./Mexico border. 

Virginia Activists to Expose the U.S./Mexico Border

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: Virginia Leavell virginia@mexicanossinfronteras.org (email to be placed on a list for regular updates) 202-674-0900 Virginia Activists to Expose the U.S./Mexico Border Immigrant justice activists from the state of Virginia will travel to Mexico and then cross the desert into Arizona without carrying government-issued identification. The action, organized by the Virginia-based activist network The People United, is scheduled to take place on April 19th. The crossing will formally end at demonstrations in Washington, D.C. organized by the immigrant justice organization Mexicans Without Borders on May 1'st . Jeff Winder, organizer with The People United and crossing participant, says, "We planned the crossing in order to expose the reality of a border where products move freely through ports of entry all day while human beings die in the desert. A militarized border does not make us safe; our safety will come when the vast disparities of wealth and power represented by trade policies like NAFTA are eliminated." Legislation in Prince William County, Virginia, requiring police to verify documentation for anyone under suspicion for having committed a crime and limiting county services to citizens, passed unanimously this fall despite a vocal struggle by the immigrant community and their allies. Other local governments are now looking to this resolution as a model for dealing with illegal immigration and over one hundred anti-immigrant bills surfaced at the state level during the current Virginia General Assembly. In Prince William County and across the state, immigrants have been detained for minor traffic offenses and face deportation and separation from their families. Sue Frankel-Streit, another The People United organizer and participant of the border crossing, comments, "With the climate in Virginia becoming increasingly racist and anti-immigrant, we need a creative, dramatic action to challenge injustice and spark more resistance among citizens." Patrick Lincoln, a Harrisonburg organizer with The People United, adds, "We want to make it clear that anti-immigrant policies, at the border and in Virginia, serve to divide us with fear, distract us from the real problems in our communities, create a vulnerable workforce, and feed the profits of corporations like Boeing and Halliburton, rather than limit immigration." Ricardo Juarez, coordinator of Mexicans Without Borders, says that the organization has endorsed the action to, "focus attention on the reasons why people are forced to cross the border in search of jobs and survival."
No votes yet