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Familia Latina unida / NO DEPORTACIONES EL DIA DE LA MADRE !

9 may

STOP DEPORTACIONES EN CHICAGO PARTICIPA EN LAS MANIFESTACIONES.

Obama la administracion con mas deportaciones en USA , separacion de familias

Obama Bate Record historico en Deportaciones de Indocumentados

13 dic

ESTE VIDEO BASICAMENTE DA GRACIAS A LA ADMINISTRACION DE OBAMA POR DEPORTAR MAS QUE NADIE !

http://ourborder.ning.com/video/immigration-enforcement-1


Find more videos like this on Our Border

EL VIDEO ES UN MONTAJE DEBIDO A QUE DICE HEMOS DEPORTADO A ESTE CRIMINAL Y AL OTRO CRIMINAL ETC…ETC…

DONDE ESTA ELVIRA AREYANO ??????????? NO ENTRA EN ESTE VIDEO O ES QUE ELLA NO COMETIO CRIMENES ? BASICAMENTE ESTAN INTENTANDO DAR UNA IMAGEN FALSA DE LAS DEPORTACIONES 90% DE LAS DEPORTACIONES SON TRABAJADORES QUE NUNCA COMETIERON CRIMENES

VEA LAS ORDENES DADAS DE LA ADMINISTRACION DE OBAMA A LOS POLICIAS DE DEPORTACION Y LEA SUS EMAILS PARA VER COMO DEPORTAN A LOS INDOCUMENTADOS EN CUSTODIA CLICK ABAJO EN EL LINK

http://www.scribd.com/doc/45248308/Ordenes-de-Deportaciones-de-la-Administracion-de-Obama-a-Policias-Origen-Washington-post-TOP-SECRET

Como dice el refran , del dicho al hecho hay un trecho , es lo que ocurre con Obama y su administracion , sobre todo en el caso de las deportaciones , debido a que en su legislatura las deportaciones han aumentado a numeros historicos como ningun otro presidente en solo el 2010 unos 392,862 han sido ya deportados fuera de USA

por que ? no se sabe pero la realidad y los hechos muestran una realidad con numeros asombrosos  y lo peor de todo es que el gol de esta administracion  para el 2011 pudiera ser is to remove 404,000 immigrants. pronostico y gol para administracion de OBama

Al dia 1100 deportaciones , lo cual hace de este gobierno una maquina de deportaciones = Policial = Judical = Billete de avion Gratis Bye Bye a Mexico , Irlanda , Germany ETC….

El problema no es ese y empieza alli ! Estas deportaciones dejan familias rotas debido a que posiblemente tubieron hijos en USA y dividen a las familias , varios ciudadanos Americanos son perjudicados claramente …la separacion de Familias crea un gran dolor en varias personas .

Ademas hay que tener bien claro que estas FAMILIAS NO COMETIERON NINGUN CRIMEN !! mas que el de trabajar para comprar pan y comida , posiblemente lavando coches o trabajando en fabricas , NO QUITANDO EL TRABAJO A NADIE !

Lean este Articulo super interesante en el Washington post por Andrew Becker

EMPEZANDO CON LOS RECORD DE LA POLICIA DE INMIGRACION QUE HAN SIDO FIILTRADOS AQUI

El gobierno debe parar las Deportaciones de Familias por Navidad en USA URGENTE

19 nov

El sistema gubernamental en USA parece no importarle deportar a miles de familas o a sus padres o madres dejando a los niños destrozados por una famila dividida.

Pedimos que se paren estas deportaciones  durante la navidad … Miles de deportaciones cada dia son realizadas por el gobierno , a personas que NO SON CRIMINALES Y NO COMETIERON CRIMENES NUNCA .

La politica agresiva del gobierno esta destruyendo Familas enteras dejando niños sin padres y madres

pedimo que se pare el proceso por Navidad ! estamos en contra de deportaciones ! de personas que no cometieron crimenes y simplemente desean vivir en paz en USA

Este Lunes, Noviembre 22 estaremos en la Congress y la Clark a las 12:00 de la tarde, que es donde esta localizada la oficina ICE. protesta en CHICAGO STOP DEPORTACIONES

Arizona Law = Hitler = Racismo = destroy America

31 jul

Video gracioso

Todavia mucho racismo en Arizona

Chicago congressman arrested at D.C. rally / Luis Gutierrez Arrestado

1 may

 

 Chicago congressman arrested at D.C. rally

Chicago U.S. Rep. Luis Gutierrez made good on his pledge to get arrested at today’s immigration rally outside the White House.

The congressman was among 35 activists detained for failing to move from a sidewalk outside the White House.

“They were asked to move by park police and they did not and they were asked again a couple more times, then they started arresting folks,” said Douglas Rivlin, a Gutierrez spokesman.

Rivlin said the protesters were taken in plastic handcuffs by U.S. Park Police and transported by bus to a processing center, where they were booked. Gutierrez was released around 7pm Eastern, Rivlin said.

Gutierrez was charged with a misdemeanor for “failure to obey a lawful order from a U.S. Park policeman” and was ordered to pay a small fine of between $50 and $100, Rivlin said.

Rivlin said Gutierrez had given U.S. Park Police a “heads-up” earlier in the week that he planned to join the demonstrators “as a courtesy.” He said Gutierrez expected to get arrested and at the time of the arrest was wearing a shirt that said “Arrest Me Not My Friends.”

Rivlin described the arrests “as very peaceful” and said Gutierrez “was very excited” about being arrested.

“He think it’s very important to keep escalating the pressure to deal with our immigration problem in this country and to keep pressure on both parties and the White House to make immigration reform a priority this year,” Rivlin said.

It was not the first time the congressman has been arrested during a demonstration. In 2001, Gutierrez was one of about 180 people arrested for trespassing on restricted Navy grounds during bombing exercises inon the Puerto Rican island of Vieques.

The D.C. march was one of 80 or so nationwide, including Chicago. Angered by a controversial Arizona immigration law, tens of thousands of protesters — including 50,000 alone in Los Angeles — rallied in cities across America demanding that President Barack Obama tackle immigration reform immediately.

Gerry Smith

cago congressman arrested at D.C. rally May 1, 2010 7:34 PM | No Comments Chicago U.S. Rep. Luis Gutierrez made good on his pledge to get arrested at today’s immigration rally outside the White House. The congressman was among 35 activists detained for failing to move from a sidewalk outside the White House. “They were asked to move by park police and they did not and they were asked again a couple more times, then they started arresting folks,” said Douglas Rivlin, a Gutierrez spokesman. Rivlin said the protesters were taken in plastic handcuffs by U.S. Park Police and transported by bus to a processing center, where they were booked. Gutierrez was released around 7pm Eastern, Rivlin said. Gutierrez was charged with a misdemeanor for “failure to obey a lawful order from a U.S. Park policeman” and was ordered to pay a small fine of between $50 and $100, Rivlin said. Rivlin said Gutierrez had given U.S. Park Police a “heads-up” earlier in the week that he planned to join the demonstrators “as a courtesy.” He said Gutierrez expected to get arrested and at the time of the arrest was wearing a shirt that said “Arrest Me Not My Friends.” Rivlin described the arrests “as very peaceful” and said Gutierrez “was very excited” about being arrested. “He think it’s very important to keep escalating the pressure to deal with our immigration problem in this country and to keep pressure on both parties and the White House to make immigration reform a priority this year,” Rivlin said. It was not the first time the congressman has been arrested during a demonstration. In 2001, Gutierrez was one of about 180 people arrested for trespassing on restricted Navy grounds during bombing exercises inon the Puerto Rican island of Vieques. The D.C. march was one of 80 or so nationwide, including Chicago. Angered by a controversial Arizona immigration law, tens of thousands of protesters — including 50,000 alone in Los Angeles — rallied in cities across America demanding that President Barack Obama tackle immigration reform immediately. –Gerry Smith

First lady Michelle Obama joins push for Sotomayor

4 jun
The White House dispatched first lady Michelle Obama to defend Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor on Wednesday, part of a broad offensive to humanize the judge that came as former GOP House Speaker Newt Gingrich backed off his harsh criticism of her as a racist.

Mrs. Obama told students at a high school graduation that Sotomayor is “more than ready” to be a justice and compared the judge’s life story of humble beginnings and high achievement to the paths taken by her husband and herself.

Sotomayor, who grew up in a New York City housing project and went on to Princeton and Yale universities, “says she still looks over her shoulder and wonders if she measures up,” Mrs. Obama said at Howard University, chiming in on Sotomayor’s behalf as her husband began a Mideast trip.

It was a subtle but pointed counter to Republicans who have cited Sotomayor’s speeches and writings about how her background affects her work as a judge to question whether she would let her personal biases interfere with her judicial decisions.

Hours earlier, Gingrich told supporters in a letter that he shouldn’t have called Sotomayor a racist, adding that the word had been “perhaps too strong and direct.” But he said the 2001 speech that prompted his remark, in which Sotomayor said she hoped the rulings of a “wise Latina” would be better than those of a white male without similar experiences, was still unacceptable.

Gingrich conceded that Sotomayor’s rulings have “shown more caution and moderation” than her speeches and writings, but he said the 2001 comments “reveal a betrayal of a fundamental principle of the American system — that everyone is equal before the law.”

Sotomayor, 54, would be the first Hispanic and the third woman to serve on the high court.

Gingrich’s comments and similar ones by radio host Rush Limbaugh — who on Wednesday said Sotomayor would bring “racism” and “bigotry” to the court — have enraged Sotomayor’s backers and caused problems for GOP figures who have been pushing to bring more diversity to the party.

Hispanic groups began a political push to force Republicans to denounce harshly worded criticism of Sotomayor, warning that their votes could depend on it.

“These gross mischaracterizations of Judge Sotomayor coupled with the deafening silence of the Republican leadership are leaving many within our community with a disturbing picture of the Republican Party. Much hangs in the balance, including our votes,” said Janet Murguia, the president and CEO of the National Council of La Raza.

The White House, working with Democratic senators, hit back at GOP charges that Sotomayor would be an activist who legislates from the bench or a justice who allows her personal bias to interfere in legal decisions. Officials circulated talking points calling Sotomayor “a nonideological and restrained judge,” citing conservatives who have praised her approach.

Wendy Long of the conservative Judicial Confirmation Network, a group leading the opposition to Sotomayor’s confirmation, called the document “the biggest piece of fiction writing I have ever seen.”

At the same time, Democratic senators circulated a 1994 speech in which Sotomayor spoke about how personal characteristics could affect judging, which Republicans never criticized during the 1997 debate on her confirmation to a federal appeals court — proof, the Democrats said, that conservatives are trying to politicize Sotomayor’s nomination.

In 1994, Sotomayor said, “I would hope that a wise woman with the richness of her experiences would, more often than not, reach a better conclusion” than a wise man. “What is better?” she said. “I … hope that better will mean a more compassionate, caring conclusion.”

“No one made an issue out of Judge Sotomayor’s comments the last time the Senate confirmed her for the federal bench, because everyone understood what she meant and knew her respect for the rule of law was unquestionable,” said Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., Sotomayor’s home-state senator and her sponsor during the confirmation process.

Sotomayor returned to Capitol Hill on Wednesday for a second day of meetings with senators, staying mostly mum in public. She has used the visits to reassure Republicans and Democrats alike in private that while her background has shaped her worldview, she believes in following the law and wouldn’t let her life experiences inappropriately influence her judgments.

At least one GOP senator seemed reassured by what Sotomayor had to say.

“I don’t think she views herself as a judicial activist,” said Sen. Olympia Snowe, R-Maine, emerging from a lengthy meeting with the judge. Snowe, one of seven Republicans currently serving who backed her confirmation in 1998, said Sotomayor had talked about the importance of the rule of law and precedent.

But many Republicans came away unconvinced.

“When I look at her ideology, record and philosophy, I’m deeply troubled,” said Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., a member of the Judiciary Committee, after his meeting with Sotomayor.

Graham said it’s not fair to call the judge a racist, but that she has to prove to senators and the public “that, if they found themselves in litigation with a Latina woman … that she would give you a fair shake.”

Sotomayor visited nine Republicans and Democrats as the leaders of the Judiciary Committee met separately but reached no deal on when her confirmation hearings should begin.

Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., the Judiciary Committee chairman, wants the process to begin next month, with the goal of holding a confirmation vote before Congress leaves in early August for a monthlong summer vacation. He’s negotiating with the top Republican on the committee, Sen. Jeff Sessions of Alabama, who says he’d rather go slower in delving into Sotomayor’s voluminous record of rulings during her 17 years as a federal judge, with hearings set for September.

Associated Press writer Ann Sanner contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Personas refugiadas, migrantes y desplazadas internamente

23 ene

Personas refugiadas, migrantes y desplazadas internamente

 

A diario, en todo el mundo, alguna persona toma la difícil decisión de abandonar su hogar. La guerra, la persecución, los desastres medioambientales y la pobreza son sólo algunas de las razones por las que una persona puede sentir que debe abandonar su familia, su comunidad o su país.

Las personas refugiadas dejan su país porque no les queda otra opción y porque temen por su vida o su seguridad o por la de su familia. También huyen de su país cuando su gobierno no quiere o no puede protegerlas frente a graves abusos contra los derechos humanos.

Las personas desplazadas internamente  son aquellas que, a causa de la guerra, la persecución o los desastres medioambientales, se ven obligadas a trasladarse dentro de su propio país, sin llegar a cruzar fronteras nacionales.

Las personas solicitantes de asilo son aquellas que han llegado a otro país y han presentado o van a presentar una solicitud para que se les reconozca la condición de refugiadas, pero aún no han sido reconocidas formalmente como tales. Estas personas tienen los mismos derechos humanos que cualquier otra. El artículo 14.1 de la Declaración Universal de Derechos Humanos establece que “[e]n caso de persecución, toda persona tiene derecho a buscar asilo, y a disfrutar de él, en cualquier país”.

Una persona migrante es una persona que se traslada de un sitio a otro para vivir, y normalmente para trabajar, de forma temporal o permanente. Las personas migrantes pueden desplazarse dentro de su país de origen o a otro país. Pueden verse obligadas a realizar ese desplazamiento por no tener acceso a alimento, agua o refugio adecuados, o para garantizar su seguridad y la de sus familias. O pueden hacerlo para encontrar un empleo o para reunirse con su familia. Muchas se marchan por una combinación de motivos.

En muchos casos, las personas tienen más de una razón para abandonar su hogar. Pero, sea cual sea el motivo, todas ellas tienen derechos humanos. Además, las personas refugiadas tienen derecho a protección internacional.

Datos clave 

  • Se calcula que 200 millones de personas viven fuera del país en el que nacieron: aproximadamente el 3 por ciento de los 6.500 millones de habitantes del mundo.
  • En el mundo hay, según estimaciones, 14,2 millones de personas refugiadas, aproximadamente el 0,21 por ciento de la población mundial.
  • La cifra de personas desplazadas internamente se calcula actualmente en torno a los 24,5 millones: el 0,4 por ciento de la población mundial.
  • La mayoría de las personas refugiadas y desplazadas internamente se encuentran en Asia y África, que entre los dos suman un total de 9,2 millones de refugiados y 18,1 millones de desplazados internos.

¿Qué está haciendo Amnistía Internacional?

Amnistía Internacional hace campaña por los derechos de las personas refugiadas, migrantes y desplazadas internamente en todo el mundo, y saca a la luz los abusos contra los derechos humanos de estas personas y su falta de protección.

Amnistía Internacional también llama la atención hacia los peligros a los que se enfrentarían estas personas si fueran obligadas a regresar a su país.

Los activistas y las Secciones de Amnistía Internacional en todo el mundo captan apoyos ante sus gobiernos para que se introduzcan cambios en las leyes, políticas y prácticas nacionales, y además trabajan con otras organizaciones para proteger los derechos de todas las personas refugiadas y migrantes.

El personal del Secretariado Internacional en Londres y Ginebra trabaja para influir en el establecimiento de políticas y normas internacionales.

Amnistía Internacional pide a todos los Estados que compartan la responsabilidad de la protección a las personas refugiadas, solicitantes de asilo, desplazadas internamente y migrantes y que cumplan las obligaciones que han contraído en virtud del derecho internacional.

Amnistía Internacional cuenta además con una red global de coordinadores y coordinadoras de refugiados en más de 50 países que trabaja junto con otras organizaciones no gubernamentales para proteger los derechos de las personas solicitantes de asilo, refugiadas, migrantes y desplazadas internamente.

Nuestra organización no representa a personas individuales en procedimientos de asilo, aunque sí puede emprender acciones sobre cuestiones o casos individuales.

Fundamentos

Uno de los principios más importantes de la Convención de Ginebra de 1951 sobre el Estatuto de los Refugiados es el principio de no devolución (non refoulement), es decir, el derecho de una persona refugiada a no ser devuelta a un país en el que corra peligro de ser perseguida. Amnistía Internacional se opone a que se devuelva a cualquier persona a un país en el que pueda correr peligro de sufrir abusos graves contra los derechos humanos.

Amnistía Internacional desea ver el fin de la detención ilegal de solicitantes de asilo en los países en los que estas personas buscan cobijo. La detención afecta de forma especialmente negativa a los ancianos, a las víctimas de tortura, a los menores no acompañados y a otras personas.

Amnistía Internacional pide a los gobiernos y a otras autoridades que respeten los derechos fundamentales de las personas desplazadas internamente. La organización se opone al reasentamiento forzado de personas a causa de su religión, origen étnico, sexo, color o lengua.

Amnistía Internacional promueve la ratificación de la Convención Internacional sobre la Protección de los Derechos de Todos los Trabajadores Migratorios y de sus Familiares. Este instrumento es uno de los nueve tratados básicos internacionales de derechos humanos y garantiza el derecho de las personas migrantes a la educación, la libertad de religión y expresión, la igualdad en el acceso a los tribunales y los derechos laborales.

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