Friday, September 02, 2005

Record numbers of illegal immigrants who cross into the US from Mexico have died in the scorching heat of the Arizona desert in the past year

BBC News:

At least 229 immigrants are known to have died since 1 October 2004, the US Border Patrol said.

Many died while wandering through vast desert areas where summer temperatures regularly soar past 40C.

In one Arizona county, a refrigerated trailer is being used to store up to 70 extra bodies as the morgue is full up.

The morgue in Pima County, Arizona can hold up to 120 bodies, but officials have called for a new permanent cooler to double its storage capacity.

"If conditions continue like this, it's something we'll have to face every year," said Bruce Parks, chief medical officer in the county.

Temperatures in the western US desert regions have remained unceasingly "brutal" throughout the summer, Border Patrol spokesman Jose Garza told the Reuters news agency.

"The smugglers continue to bring these people to the vastness of our western deserts... and we cannot control the elements."

Temperatures in Arizona have peaked at 44C this year, with the mercury in Tucson staying at 40C or above for 29 consecutive days in June and July.

An estimated 81 immigrants died during that heatwave, Mr Garza said.

Arizona serves as the main crossing point for some 1.1 million immigrants who make the journey into the US from Mexico each year.

Border Patrol officers have carried out about 700 missions to rescue immigrants stranded in the desert region this summer.

Mexican immigrant deaths soar in Arizona heat

Pima County using refrigerated tractor trailer as temporary morgue

1 Comments:

At 1:13 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

The deaths are extremely unfortunate.

But they are the result of voluntarily undertaking what is widely known as a dangerous (not to mention illegal) journey. And, speaking of Mexican nationals, who no doubt are the vast majority of the victims, I don't really believe living conditions in Mexico are so bad that it is worth risking one's life in the desert to escape them.

 

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