The Chronicle

‘IT’S UGLY’ Civil war brews in US border town

Texas retains control of park land, as the Federal Border Patrol, residents and migrants are kept out

- Tom Minear US Correspond­ent

On the banks of the Rio Grande, in a park known as the graveyard of the Confederac­y, a new civil war could be brewing.

US Federal Border Patrol agents have always managed the waterfront in Eagle Pass, a Texas town across the river from Mexico that is popular with migrants illegally entering the US. That was until one night in January, when armed Texas military forces refused to let federal personnel into Shelby Park. They closed the gates and started erecting razor wire, fencing and shipping containers to seize control of the 4km stretch of the border. The drastic action, after thousands of migrants surged into Eagle Pass, responded to what Texas Governor Greg Abbott called an invasion. President Joe Biden failed to enforce US laws, he said, so he invoked Texas’s “constituti­onal authority to defend and protect itself”. “We’ve had it. We’re not going to let this happen any more,” he thundered.

The irony of Mr Abbott’s defiance is not lost on the residents of Eagle Pass.

In 1865, instead of surrenderi­ng to Union troops, Confederat­e leader General Joseph Shelby and his men planted their flag in the river and fled to Mexico. Now, 159 years after their last stand, the park named in his honour is the scene of the first salvo in a bitter new conflict.

So far, despite Texas National Guard troops patrolling in Humvees, the battle is being fought strictly in the courts. The Biden administra­tion has launched a series of legal challenges, not just for access to the border, but to remove buoys placed in the Rio Grande to deter migrants and to tear up a new law that makes it a state crime for migrants to illegally enter Texas.

Mr Abbott’s Republican supporters are neverthele­ss beating the drums of war.

“The feds are staging a civil war,” Louisiana congressma­n Clay Higgins declared in January, “and Texas should stand their ground.”

Migration Policy Institute experts Muzaffar Chishti and Julia Gelatt say the saga is “raising fears of a looming constituti­onal crisis and hearkening back to Civil War-era questions over the division of federal and state authority on contentiou­s policy issues”.

In Eagle Pass, however, locals just want their park back. The 19ha area is usually filled with community events and children’s sport, and includes a boat ramp to the river.

Jesse Fuentes planned to spend his retirement turning his lifelong passion for the Rio Grande into a canoe and kayak tour business, until state authoritie­s locked him out.

He now needs special permission to access the river, which is only granted for some journalist­s.

“If you get in the water and look to the right, Mexico looks beautiful. You look to the left, and damn, it’s ugly,” he says.

“They’re just putting on a show here at Shelby Park.”

State authoritie­s say the militarisa­tion of the Eagle Pass border is working. Migrant crossings have dramatical­ly slowed this year, although a crackdown in Mexico has also had an impact.

Inside the park – where locals are banned except for a golf course that bizarrely remains open – Texas personnel show off military equipment including a surveillan­ce system that can spot migrants up to 30km away. Drones fly overhead, boats patrol the river, and troops stand guard with rifles.

Caught in razor wire along the river bank are shoes, clothes and water bottles – signs of the migrants who have desperatel­y still tried to find their way through.

Days after Texas took control of Shelby Park, a woman and two children drowned.

In the war of words that followed, US Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar accused state personnel of preventing Border Patrol agents from trying to rescue them.

Standing in front of the Shelby Park fence, Eagle Pass Border Coalition activist Amerika Garcia Grewal says the Abbott policy is “bloody murder”.

She argues it heightens the risk for migrants on the already treacherou­s journey to the US.

In December, she helped erect 700 crosses in the park to remember those who died trying to cross the border last year. There were 43 who drowned in Eagle Pass, including babies.

“There are days it seems that the ambulance wails never stop,” local fire chief Manuel Mello told congress.

Like Ms Garcia Grewal and Mr Fuentes, former mayor Jose Aranda believes Mr Abbott is using Eagle Pass as “a great stage for the Republican statement about the border”.

Other governors have visited to defend Mr Abbott’s right to “protect the sovereignt­y of our states and the nation”, as has former US president Donald Trump, who promises that if he is re-elected this year: “I won’t send Texas a restrainin­g order, I will send them reinforcem­ents.”

The Biden administra­tion has had some success fighting back. The Supreme Court decided Border Patrol agents could cut the razor wire on the river bank, although they are yet to try. But the nation’s highest court also briefly allowed Texas’s migrant arrest law to go into effect last week, before an appeals court intervened.

If it is enacted, it will spark an internatio­nal standoff, with the Mexican government refusing to accept migrants deported by Texas.

Mr Abbott is undeterred. He is spending $US10bn ($A15.2bn) on his Operation Lone Star crackdown. In Eagle Pass, a new “forward operating base” will store equipment and house at least 1800 troops.

“The only thing that we’re not doing is we’re not shooting people who come across the border,” the Texas Governor said last month, “because of course, the Biden administra­tion would charge us with murder.”

Mr Fuentes says the “authoritar­ian and racist” Abbott is using Eagle Pass as a “political pawn … I’m just waiting for someone to show up and say, hey, get your stuff out of here – you don’t belong here”.

Mr Biden so far seems unwilling to chase Mr Abbott out.

While history may not repeat itself in Shelby Park, it certainly rhymes.

“I’m waiting for someone to say (to Texas forces) – you don’t belong here

Jesse Fuentes Eagle Pass resident

 ?? ?? Republican presidenti­al candidate and former president Donald Trump visits the Eagle Pass border.
Republican presidenti­al candidate and former president Donald Trump visits the Eagle Pass border.
 ?? Picture: Sergio Flores ?? Jesse Fuentes, owner of a canoe and kayak business in Eagle Pass, Texas.
Picture: Sergio Flores Jesse Fuentes, owner of a canoe and kayak business in Eagle Pass, Texas.
 ?? ?? US President Joe Biden with Border Patrol agents as he visits the border in Brownsvill­e, Texas.
US President Joe Biden with Border Patrol agents as he visits the border in Brownsvill­e, Texas.

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