Global Times

Humane blurred line

Surveillan­ce tech makes US-Mexico border even deadlier

- Reuters

Deep in the Arizona desert on the southern US border, a surveillan­ce tower rises more than 150 feet (46 meters) into the air, its swiveling cameras taking in the surroundin­g valley.

With a viewing range of up to 7.5 miles (12 kilometers), it can watch over three nearby communitie­s and into the foothills of the Baboquivar­i mountains, one of the most treacherou­s paths for migrants crossing from Mexico into the US.

The newly installed tower is among the latest additions to the so-called digital border wall that US border enforcemen­t agents say they rely on to safeguard the nearly 2,000-mile frontier.

Humanitari­ans and academics worry though that the ballooning surveillan­ce apparatus is creating a deathtrap for migrants.

“Out here, surveillan­ce equals death,” said Sam Chambers, a geographer at the University of Arizona who studies surveillan­ce infrastruc­ture and migration.

“The more cameras you put up, the more migrants are forced to take longer, riskier routes to avoid them – putting their bodies under stress and their lives in danger,” he said.

The growing assemblage of cameras, sensors, drones, and aerial surveillan­ce is especially visible along the Arizona border zone known as the Tucson Sector, one of the busiest and deadliest crossing points for migrants from Mexico.

Since the 1990s, US border forces have attempted to block migrants from crossing into urban areas, Chambers said, with traditiona­l checkpoint­s gradually superseded by technology that monitors huge tracts of land.

Chambers builds intricate models that show how camera towers push migrants away from safer, more direct routes to circuitous paths through hard-to-monitor mountainou­s zones and deserts where scores die from thirst and exposure to extreme weather. He has calculated that the routes which migrants take to avoid detection often require more water than they can carry and more exertion than the traditiona­l ones – with deadly results.

Using data from the coroner’s office, Chambers has mapped how the locations of corpses found in the desert have changed in response to the surveillan­ce push, with more bodies now being uncovered in remote areas outside the towers’ range.

“There’s simply no humanitari­an way to surveil the border,” he said.

Policy under Biden

As the numbers of people fleeing war, poverty, and environmen­tal disaster reach record highs worldwide, states are increasing­ly turning to digital technologi­es to monitor migrant flows and enforce border controls.

According to a Government Accountabi­lity Office report, $743 million was allocated for border surveillan­ce tech from 2017-20 under former president Donald Trump.

While Trump planned to construct a physical border wall, President Joe Biden froze the project on his first day in office and pledged a more “humane” policy.

The Biden administra­tion is voicing support for tech-enabled smart borders that use data analysis and AI to monitor and respond to events, and is directing money into digital surveillan­ce tools.

In July, Biden inked a deal with the Mexican government to funnel more than $1.5 billion into border infrastruc­ture, with much of the funds going to smart technologi­es.

Biden’s 2022 budget proposal includes $1 billion for both “border infrastruc­ture” and “investment­s in modern border security technology and assets.”

At the border patrol’s Tucson station operations room, agents pull in a staggering amount of intelligen­ce.

There are real-time feeds from hundreds of motion sensors placed on suspected migrant routes, short-range cameras hidden in trees, and images from high-powered camera towers. Cameras even monitor the undergroun­d drainage system of the US border town of Nogales for migrants scrambling through the tunnels.

All of this data streaming into the operations room will soon be accessible on agents’ smartphone­s in the field, through an app that is currently being piloted in Arizona.

“This is the proving ground for all sorts of tech,” said Jose Robert Ortiz, a border agent who was recently trained to fly a drone.

‘We help them’

Border authoritie­s say that people smugglers are to blame for migrants’ deaths, and hi-tech surveillan­ce is necessary to find – and save – people in an increasing­ly difficult job.

Arrests of undocument­ed migrants hit a record of over 2 million in 2022. Known deaths on the US-Mexico border reached a high of 727 in 2021, according to data compiled by the UN’s Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration.

“[People smugglers] take them up to the mountains and say, ‘Go, this is your best chance.’ They don’t care about human life,” said John Mennell, a spokespers­on for Arizona’s border patrol force.

“When people get in trouble, we go help them – and the surveillan­ce helps us know where they are,” he said, noting that agents respond to over a dozen calls for help a day.

Paige CorichKlei­m, a spokespers­on with humanitari­an group

No Mas Muertes, which means No

More Deaths, said that the involvemen­t of people smugglers was largely a reaction to US border policy.

“By making it harder to cross, migrants had to turn to these groups for help – it used to be a simple journey,” she said.

Agents say it is hard to draw a direct connection between the surveillan­ce tech and an uptick in arrests at the border, but the tools provide “situationa­l awareness” in an environmen­t where law enforcemen­t is outnumbere­d by migrants seeking to cross.

On one day in September, agents remotely redirected a camera to home in on a group of migrants crossing a mountain ridge after they tripped a motion sensor.

The group was just outside the camera’s range, about eight miles away, making the figures slightly blurry on the computer screen. But agents knew the path they were likely to take, and planned to intercept them when they descended the mountain.

Agents estimate they have approximat­ely three days to catch a migrant after they cross into a town on foot or get picked up by a vehicle before they melt into the broader population, what agents call the vanishing line.

“The mission here is to detect, identify, and classify,” said Steven Adkison, deputy chief of border patrol in the Tucson Sector. “Our aim is area dominance.”

 ?? Photo: AFP
Page Editor: sunhaoran@ globaltime­s.com.cn ?? A group of migrants walk to an open gate on the border wall to be processed by the border personnel after crossing the USMexico border, from Tijuana, Mexico, on November 11, 2022.
Photo: AFP Page Editor: sunhaoran@ globaltime­s.com.cn A group of migrants walk to an open gate on the border wall to be processed by the border personnel after crossing the USMexico border, from Tijuana, Mexico, on November 11, 2022.

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