


Green
Party of Ventura
DECLARATION OF
MONTERREY
DECLARATION OF MONTERREY
“on borders, migratory agreements, and the rights of migrants”
March 21 and 22, 2002
Monterrey, Mexico
We, migrant men, women and children. We, immigrant communities of
the Americas. We, organizations of migrants hereby declare:
- That we are the people who with pain and resolve leave behind
our families in order to offer them a better future, a better
life. We have made the terribly difficult decision to emigrate and
leave our beloved countries because we lacked meaningful
employment, access to education, adequate housing for our
families, land to work, access to good health, and a future for
our children.
- That we, immigrants, are the people who with hope in our hands
and sadness on our backs, walk long days and nights, not in search
of plenty, but rather in search of the minimum needed to live and
to educate and support our children. We cross deserts, mountains,
rivers, and seas suffering through the heat, the cold, and our own
loneliness. We die there, on the border and along the roads,
without grief, without anyone saying a word.
- That we are the people who are told day in and day out that we
are not welcome, while the governments of Mexico and the United
States talk of integration and globalization. We are held in
little or no esteem, and are told we have no rights to guarantee
our existence. We can be victims of abuse and mistreatment, and
even assassinated, simply for looking for work…, and no one says
anything.
- That we are the people who in the fields of Texas and New
Mexico harvest tomatoes and chiles from daybreak to sunset. We
work in the meatpacking plants of Iowa and Nebraska We clean and
keep up the hotels and restaurants of Houston and Los Angeles. We
mow the grass on the golf courses of Arizona and tend the gardens
of homes all across America. We take care of the sick and elderly,
prepare the food in all types of kitchens, and pick up the garbage
in our neighborhoods. We build the roads and highways for those
who, ironically, do not let us drive them.
- We immigrants are also the ones who through our hard work buy
homes, set up shops, restaurants, and even large businesses that
contribute to the economic growth of many communities. We are
professors, researchers, engineers, and doctors who contribute
knowledge and well-being to the community. We are artists, poets,
and writers who enrich the culture and language of the society
that refuses to receive us. Like any other member of society, we
pay taxes and fulfill our fiscal obligations.
- But we are also the people whose right to an identity is
denied. We work 10 or 14 hours a day for less than minimum wage
because the laws are inadequate to protect us. We are lack access
to preventive health care and driver’s licenses because we have no
social security number. We are denied access to schools because we
are foreigners. We are those who do not exist and do not count in
this society, because we have no document.
We, migrant men, women and children. We, communities of
immigrants from the Americas. We, organizations of migrants ask
and demand today in Monterrey at the resumption of the dialogue
between Presidents Bush and Fox, that our voices be heard. We
believe we can no longer remain silent or unheard, and that the
right to human mobility, which gives reason to our being, should
be recognized and integrated completely into the current global
processes.
We propose and declare that in order to be integral, humane,
and dignified, true immigration reform should consider the
following:
- A broad and comprehensive legalization program for all
nationalities of undocumented immigrants and their families that
live in the United States. Any program discussing temporary worker
status that does not include the option of permanent residency for
immigrants already living in the U.S. is unacceptable.
- The legalization of future migratory flows. Minimum rights
need to be guaranteed in any program addressing migration into the
U.S Including the Right of Entry- the process of crossing borders
has to be legal, free of abuse and orderly. The Right to
Employment- where immigrant workers have the same economic and
labor guarantees as any resident and citizen of the United States,
including the right to a social security number. The Right to
Permanent Residency-with the option to become a US citizen for
immigrants workers who desire to live their lives in the United
States. Moreover, the restitution of the lost savings of
ex-Bracero workers and the protection of the savings of future
migrant workers must be guaranteed.
- The defense and protection of immigrant rights must include:
- The decriminalization of work through the elimination of employers sanctions;
- adequate resources to enforce labor laws and other civil rights laws;
- the elimination of immigrant based restrictions
to legal and social service programs;
- the right to organize collectively and to unionize to
improve wages and working conditions;
- the right to choose and change employers (worker mobility);
- equal protections and rights under labor and civil rights laws;
- legal protections in seeking justice for acts of hate
violence and xenophobia and the right to due process and equal
protections under the law.
- The protection of human and civil rights during the
enforcement of immigration laws. These include the revision of the
actual strategies for anti-terrorism and interior and border
control on the US/Mexico/Canadian border and other major entry
points, and the demilitarization of these.
- Significant immigration reforms including the revision of
anti-terrorist legislation, the use of secret evidence, extended
detention, and military tribunals, the per-country quota system,
resolution of the backlog of pending applications for immigration
visas and citizenship, access to adjustment of status and
opportunities for family reunification, and an end to unfair
political asylum and deportation processes and other impediments
to acquiring permanent residency.
- The implementation of global policies that resolve effectively
the problems of displacement, unemployment and migration of poor
countries, beginning with the elimination of transnational
enforcement policies, such as “Operation Disrupt,” that impede and
criminalize the flows of immigrants.
- Immigration and human mobility must be included in all
economic integration agreements. Some concrete steps can be taken
such as the critical review of structural adjustment programs that
the IMF and World Bank impose on developing countries, not
allowing those countries to respond to the needs of local
development, and making the burden of sacrifice fall
disproportionately on the poor. The cancellation of the debt of
these countries should also be broadened.
- Respect and equality for All. Serious steps must be taken
towards the elimination of discrimination and racism in US
society, especially towards immigrants, people of color and other
minorities.
We immigrant men, women and children. We immigrant communities of
the Americas. We immigrant organizations break the silence. We raise
our voices to make it clear that we do count, that we do exists and
that we are human beings. We will only become part of global
integration when all countries from border to border recognize that
all people are equal with rights and dignity.
ORGANIZATIONS / SIGNATORIES:
American Friends Service Committee
(AFSC)
Alianza Civica, Mexico.
Familia Franciscana Internacional. México
Asociacion para la Residencia y Ciudadania de America (ARCA)
Asociacion de Organizaciones Comunitarias para la Reforma Ahora
(ACORN), Houston TX
Asociacion Tepeyac. Nueva York
BRACEROPROA. Mexico
Border Network for Human Rights (BNHR). El Paso, TX
Ciudadanos en Apoyo a los Derechos Humanos, A.C. (CADHAC)
Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles (CHIRLA)
CAUSA. Oregon
Centro de Apoyo al Migrante. Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua
Centro de Apoyo al Migrante. Reynosa, Mexico
Centro de Estudios Fronterizos y Promocion de los Derechos Humanos
A.C.(CEFPRODH)
Comité pro Justicia para Serafín Olvera
Coalicion Nacional por la Dignidad y la Amnistia
Coalicion de Texas por la Dignidad y la Amnistia (CTDA)
Coalicion pro Justicia en las Maquiladoras
Diocesan Migrant and Refugee Services, Inc. El Paso, TX
Grupo Creciendo Unidos. Ed Couch, TX
El Barzon (Monterrey)
Immigration Law Enforcement Monitoring Project (ILEMP)
Inmigrantes Latinos en Accion (ILA). Austin, TX
Foro Migraciones
Fuerza Unida, San Antonio, TX
Los Pasamontañas
Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund (MALDEF)
National Network for Immigrant and Refugee Rights (National
Legalization Campaign)
PCUN
Projecto Libertad. Harlingen, TX
2002, Green Party of Ventura
Page Last Updated: April, 2002