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Sister Cities: Fountain Hills hosts conference

At a time when numerous conflicts exist between nations, 77 representatives from 12 Arizona Sister Cities gathered Saturday, April 30, to foster friendly relationships with 51 global communities.

It hasn t stopped : Arizona volunteers try to stem the tide of migrant deaths in the desert | Business

AJO – It was a simple message scrawled into a basalt rock lying near-empty cans of beans and jugs of water that volunteers had left deep in the Sonoran Desert for undocumented immigrants passing through: “Gracias.” But to Mikal Jakubal, who, as a volunteer with the Ajo Samaritans, had been making weekly trips into the backcountry to stock water drop locations, the note was affirmation that the group’s efforts were appreciated. “For the most part, we will never hear from the people who use this,” Jakubal said. “We don’t know what it was like getting to this point. We don’t know what is after this. But you have this one little connection across massively different life experiences: They found some water and you found a thank you note.”

It hasn t stopped : Arizona volunteers try to stem the tide of migrant deaths in the desert

Advertisement: “You can’t even describe what we are doing as a Band-Aid on a gushing wound,” Jakubal said. He said a long history of U.S. policies in Latin America has contributed to the reasons migrants are risking their lives to trek for days through harsh terrain in hopes of finding better lives in the U.S. In other words, Jakubal said, “what’s going on at the border now is like a symptom on top of a symptom on top of a symptom of the deeper problem.” A shift in policy Doug Ruopp, a veteran volunteer with the migrant aid group Humane Borders, remembers a time before people started to die at striking rates in the Sonoran Desert. He moved to Tucson from New England in the late 1990s to become a bilingual teacher. Back then, the border crossings he heard about were different.

Humane Borders cites deadliest year on record for migrants crossing through Arizona border

Humane Borders cites deadliest year on record for migrants crossing through Arizona border Unmute TUCSON (KVOA) A local non-profit that tracks migrant deaths along our southern borders says last year was the deadliest year on record for those trekking through the desert to come to the United States. According to officials at Humane Borders, last year, they recorded 227 deaths from migrants crossing into the U.S. through the Arizona border. The reality is that last year was the deadliest year that we have on record, Tony Banegas said. Banegas is the Chief Executive Officer for Colibri Center for Human Rights, a group that works to identify the bodies left in the desert and notify their families.

2020 was deadliest year for migrants crossing unlawfully into US via Arizona

2020 was deadliest year for migrants crossing unlawfully into US via Arizona
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