Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Hundreds of migrants die every year trying to cross the southwest border

- The Philadelph­ia Inquirer (TNS)

How many migrants have died trying to cross the southwest border into the United States?

Nobody knows for sure. Thousands, at least.

People ran out of water and burned up with hypertherm­ia in 120-degree desert heat. Some froze to death at night. Others were hit by trains, or run over by cars in a final highway sprint. They drowned in rivers, became trapped in rock crevices, got bitten by poisonous snakes. Arizona alone has 17 different kinds of rattlesnak­es, including the deadly Mohave.

Some died of illness in federal custody.

“We’ve kind of lost sight of the human cost of this, because we’re thinking about other pressing migration issues or political issues,” said Jason De Leon, a University of California, Los Angeles anthropolo­gy professor and author of “The Land of Open Graves: Living and Dying on the Migrant Trail.”

The Border Patrol counted 7,442 deaths from 1998 to 2018, an average of 372 a year.

But that’s likely an undercount, U.S. Customs and Border Protection acknowledg­es, due to the multiple police and government entities that operate at the border, and the crazy-quilt of lands controlled by states, ranchers, developers, private interests, national parks and Native American nations.

As a result, some deaths never become known to the Border Patrol, the agency said.

The Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration, a U.n.-related agency, counted 1,905 deaths from 2014 to 2018, roughly 430 more than the Border Patrol recorded during the same time. But IOM doesn’t claim its figures are definitive.

“All existing death counts,” IOM wrote, “have gaps.”

The San Diego activist group Border Angels estimates 10,000 dead since 1994, which computes to a higher annual average than both official agencies.

People trek north from Mexico, but these days more of them are in flight from violence and poverty in Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras.

Some simply vanish, their fates unknown to families at home and authoritie­s on the American side of the line. Extreme desert conditions and hungry animals that drag away bones can rapidly make a body disappear.

No More Deaths, a southern Arizona group that leaves jugs of water on well-traveled migrant paths, blames American enforcemen­t policies for what it claims are thousands of disappeara­nces over the last 25 years.

In the mid-1990s, the government began hardening ports of entry by adding new agents, fencing and sensors. That redirected migrants toward remote areas, into desert and mountain terrain so treacherou­s that authoritie­s expected people would abandon plans for traveling before they ever left home.

“The idea (was) if people die, others will stop coming,” De Leon said, adding that the government misunderst­ood a key reality: “The threat of death in Arizona is nothing compared to death in Honduras.”

 ?? Los Angeles Times/tns ?? No More Deaths supporters during a reading of the names of the some of the 137 migrants who have been found dead in the Cabeza Prieta National Wildlife Refuge during a vigil in Tuscon March 2019.
Los Angeles Times/tns No More Deaths supporters during a reading of the names of the some of the 137 migrants who have been found dead in the Cabeza Prieta National Wildlife Refuge during a vigil in Tuscon March 2019.

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