Yuma Sun

Clergy call activists to support migrants on border

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PHOENIX — Arizona clergy are calling activists to gather this weekend at the state’s border with Mexico and leave large jugs of water on remote trails for migrants who continue to cross the desert during the dangerousl­y hot summer.

The Sunday gathering organized by faith leaders and local groups such as No More Deaths comes just a week after the U.S. Border Patrol detained a group of 95 Central Americans, including at least one infant, in the same general area near the border where the heat regularly exceeds 100 degrees (37 Celsius) during the summer.

The people from Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador ranged in age from 3 months to 60 years and were found to be in good health. They were turned over to the Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agency.

The Rev. Susan Frederick-Gray, president of the Unitarian Universali­st Associatio­n who was a Phoenix minister for nine years, said she wants to demonstrat­e solidarity with migrants and aid workers. Arizona faith leaders have a long history of activism and were at the forefront of the 1980s sanctuary movement that provided safe haven to Central Americans fleeing civil war in their homelands.

“Providing humanitari­an aid is not a crime,” Frederick-Gray said. “Fleeing your country to save your life or save your children is not a crime. Human beings have a right to flee when they are in danger.”

Also traveling to southern Arizona will be Rachel Gore Freed, a human rights attorney with experience representi­ng immigrants.

The vice president of the faith-based Unitarian Universali­st Service Committee, Freed said the stream of Central American migrants still crossing the region underscore­s “the incredible violence they are fleeing” and insisted that “access to water during a long and complicate­d route is something that should be protected.”

The administra­tion of President Donald Trump has been outspoken in its opposition to illegal immigratio­n and promotes the constructi­on of a border wall to keep migrants out.

The activists will set out shortly after sunrise Sunday to leave one-gallon (3.79 liters) jugs of water along trails frequented by migrants in the Cabeza Prieta National Wildlife Refuge near Ajo, Arizona.

Thousands of migrants have died crossing the border since the mid-1990s, when heightened enforcemen­t in San Diego and El Paso, Texas, pushed traffic into Arizona’s remote deserts. The remains of 128 such border crossers were recovered last year from the southern Arizona desert, according to figures from the Pima County Medical Examiner’s Office.

Alicia Dinsmore of No More Deaths said a large number of the remains were found in Cabeza Prieta and neighborin­g Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument.

Local Border activist Scott Warren was arrested in January after Border Patrol agents conducted surveillan­ce on a building in nearby Ajo, about 40 miles (64 kilometers) north of the border, where two immigrants allegedly were given food, water, beds and clean clothes.

The 35-year-old No More Deaths volunteer faces a federal charge of harboring two people in the country illegally. Warren has declined to speak with the news media and is seeking protection from prosecutio­n, saying his spiritual values compel him to help all people in distress.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? THIS 2010 FILE PHOTO shows volunteers with the humanitari­an group No More Deaths heading out to fill water stations for illegal immigrants near Arivaca, Ariz., about 13 miles north of Mexico.
ASSOCIATED PRESS THIS 2010 FILE PHOTO shows volunteers with the humanitari­an group No More Deaths heading out to fill water stations for illegal immigrants near Arivaca, Ariz., about 13 miles north of Mexico.

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