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US to crack down on illegal immigrants
Foreign Desk Report
WASHINGTON—US President George W. Bush signed a new budget for the US
Homeland Security department that sharply boosts funding to fight
illegal immigration, as the department’s head said they would now expel
without exception all illegal immigrants. The bill totaled 30.8 billion
dollars in discretionary spending, 1.8 billion dollars higher than the
current year’s budget. Of the total, 7.5 billion dollars is committed to
fight the rising number of illegal immigrants in the country.
“We’ve got to strengthen security along our borders to stop people from
entering illegally,” Bush said. “We’re going to make this country safer
for all our citizens,” he said. The government will also make stronger
efforts to search out and deport illegal immigrants already in the
country, Bush said. “We must improve our ability to find and apprehend
illegal immigrants who have made it across the border,” he said.
“We’ve got to work to ensure that those who are caught are returned to
their home countries as soon as possible.” Bush’s statement followed
comments by Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff earlier Tuesday
that his department aims to expel all illegal immigrants without
exception. “Our goal at DHS (Homeland Security) is to completely
eliminate the ‘catch and release’ enforcement problem, and return every
single illegal entrant, no exceptions,” Chertoff told a Senate hearing.
“It should be possible to achieve significant and measurable progress to
this end in less than a year,” he said.
The Homeland Security budget includes 2.3 billion dollars for the US
Border Patrol, and millions of dollars for increasing and improving
border fences and technological surveillance. The increased budget will
enable the government hire 100 more immigration department agents and
250 investigators. Prison space will be expanded by about 10 percent, or
2,000 beds, to accommodate the expected increase in apprehensions of
illegal immigrants who are not Mexicans. Chertoff told senators that
currently a non-Mexican illegal immigrant caught trying to enter the
United States across the southwest border has an 80 percent chance of
being released immediately because of the shortage of holding
facilities.
“We are moving to end this ‘catch and release’ style of border
enforcement by reengineering our detention and removal process,”
Chertoff said. Bush meanwhile explained a separate strategy for
Mexicans, who comprise by far the largest number of illegal immigrants
in the country. |