6:54 am By Maegan La Mala · children|crime|Family|Immigration|Nashville|Women · 7 Comments
3 Oct 2009
Four day old Yair Anthony Carrillo and his mother, Maria Gurrolla of Nashville, Tennessee were doubly victimized by the fear that is the current immigration system in the United States on Tuesday, when the infant was kidnapped by a woman claiming to be an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent.
The fake official slashed Gurrolla after she initially refused to hand over the child though in the end Carillo was taken away from her.
As if having your newborn child violently taken from your arms weren’t traumatic enough, enter Yuri Cunza, president of Nashville Area Hispanic Chamber of Commerce and publisher of La Noticia, a Spanish language newspaper in Nashville who instead of connecting the long history of how immigration enforcement separates parents from their children, from Elvira Arellano to Cirila Baltazar Cruz, asks Latino immigrants communities to trust law enforcement and other state agencies who act as de facto ICE agents.
“I am really concerned about the possibility of newborn babies and Hispanic women can be targeted because of a level of vulnerability,” Cunza said…
Cunza said that the suspect posing as an immigration officer will create a chilling effect for Hispanics who regularly interact with immigration authorities. “It is misrepresenting how the government works or behaves in this country,” he said.
From Postville to Patchogue, the cries of immigrant mothers and children tell what is just another day on the job for those who continue to terrorize Latino immigrant communities and the carriers of hate who spread their racist gospel via the mainstream media. It is why children at a young age learn to stay close to their mothers in immigrant communities and maintain a low gaze in the presence of law enforcement. It doesn’t even matter if the ICE badge is real or not, just ask el espiritu de Brisenia Flores and her father. Yair Anthony Carrillo, with four days on this earth, is learning how to live in fear when he should be in his mother’s loving care and Latina motherhood is criminalized and victimized.
Updated: Late last night, after I wrote this post, Yair was found safe.
Via/ The Latin Americanist, Standing Firm, The Unapologetic Mexican
12:26 pm By la Macha · Immigration · Comments Off
26 Mar 2009From CNN comes the news that
U.S. citizens are stealing the babies of undocumented immigrants
According to police, a woman claiming to be an immigration official spoke to migrant worker Rosa Sirilo-Francisco at the Hillsborough County Health Department and told her she had to turn over her 2-month-old daughter Sandra Cruz-Francisco or face deportation. The baby’s parents are from Mexico and had taken the child to the clinic for a routine check-up, according to Wilson.
After giving up the child, the mother was told by a relative in Georgia that federal immigration officials would not follow such a procedure, so the parents reported their daughter missing.
Ten hours later, Pereira surrendered the child to Manatee County sheriff’s deputies, according to authorities.
There are so many sad things going on here–I betcha million dollars that the woman specifically went after an immigrant child because she was going to try to pass it off as her own. Which makes me sad because I wonder what has this woman gone through mentally in her attempts to have a child? But even more than my sympathy for her, I feel for the family and for an entire community that knows it’s a legitimate practice of the U.S. government to take their children away for no damn reason (please see ICE raids). They have no recourse when somebody says “give me your child.” Even rapists have to be proven to be rapists in a court of law where they have the right to defend themselves before they lose their children.
Is citizenship really the only protection parents have when it comes to keeping their children safe?
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.
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