Truro News

Anti-wall crowd shouts at border crossing before Trump visit

- BY JULIE WATSON AND ELLIOT SPAGAT

About 100 demonstrat­ors protested President Donald Trump’s proposed U. S.- Mexico border wall Tuesday, shouting and holding signs at the busiest U.S. border crossing before he inspects prototypes intended to guide future constructi­on.

Protesters chanted, “No ban! No wall!” near the San Ysidro border crossing where tens of thousands of people enter the U.S. daily from Tijuana, Mexico, many on their way to work or school in San Diego. Drivers honked as a show of support.

Jose Gonzalez, 21, stopped to snap a photo of the protesters holding signs, including one that read: “Wall off Putin!”

“I don’t think it’s really fair how he has the choice to separate us,” said Gonzalez, a dual citizen who lives in Tijuana and crosses daily to work at a San Diego ramen restaurant.

Army veteran Mark Prieto, 48, shook his head as he walked by the protest.

“People are so narrow-minded,” said the firefighte­r, who voted for Trump. “Finally we have someone who is putting America first.”

Trump will examine eight nine-metre-tall prototypes built last year along the border in a bid to fulfil his signature campaign promise.

Dozens of pro- and anti-wall demonstrat­ors gathered peacefully on opposite sides of a street leading to the prototypes, with a heavy police presence separating them.

Large trucks filled gaps between the prototypes on Monday, offering a layer of protection. A man, woman and two children were seen climbing the border fence at the site and were immediatel­y detained.

The president was also to speak with immigratio­n enforcemen­t officials and with Marines at Marine Corps Air Station Miramar before heading to a fundraiser in Los Angeles.

San Diego’s Republican mayor criticized Trump’s short visit, saying the president won’t get a full picture of the city. Kevin Faulconer said that if Trump stayed more than a few hours, he would see that a strong economy and free trade aren’t a contradict­ion but a way of life.

The mayor, a business-friendly Republican and ardent supporter of the North American Free Trade Agreement, said a popular crossborde­r airport terminal connecting San Diego and Tijuana shows that “building bridges has worked wonders.” The terminal is a few miles from the border-wall prototypes.

Trump had campaigned against NAFTA as a job killer that he said encouraged American companies to move factories to Mexico to exploit cheap labour. Renegotiat­ions over the deal began last summer.

Faulconer, writing in The San Diego Union-tribune, also said San Diego police work to protect everyone regardless of immigratio­n status, an apparent dig at Trump’s push to target illegal immigratio­n.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Roberto Perez Garcia of Mexico participat­es in a rally in Tijuana, Mexico, against the border wall.
AP PHOTO Roberto Perez Garcia of Mexico participat­es in a rally in Tijuana, Mexico, against the border wall.

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