http://www.humaneventsonline.com/article.php?id=2716

The real life horror story that began eighteen months ago when an Arab
illegal alien named Youseff Balaghi showed up at a San Diego hospital,
dying from what the Border Patrol initially�and erroneously�feared was
radiation sickness, has now reached high into Mexico's foreign
service.

On Sept. 11, 2001, Imelda Ortiz Abdala was Mexico's consul in Lebanon.
On Nov. 12, 2003, Mexican authorities arrested her, according to the
Associated Press, "on charges of helping a smuggling ring move Arab
migrants into the United States from Mexico." The AP said Mexico had
also arrested "alleged ring leader Salim Boughader Mucharafille."
Boughader earlier pleaded guilty in the U.S. to the smuggling incident
that resulted in Balaghi's death.

Unfortunately, this story is not over.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Mike Skerlos prosecuted Boughader. This week,
citing Ortiz's arrest, I asked him if there were other rings still
bringing Middle Easterners in from Mexico.

"Yes," he said.

Another Front

Far from Iraq, there's another front where the terror war's not over.
It's on our own border�and, here, the key enemies are the smugglers
who bring people such as Balaghi into California, and who collaborate
with allegedly corrupt officials such as Ortiz.

In congressional testimony in 2002, then-Assistant Immigration and
Naturalization Service Commissioner Joseph Greene said: "Information
available to the INS indicates terrorist organizations often use human
smuggling operations to move around the globe." According to a Library
of Congress study, "Organized Crime and Terrorist Activity in Mexico,
1999-2002," former Mexican national security adviser Adolfo Aguilar
Zinser said in May 2001: "Spanish and Islamic terrorist groups are
using Mexico as a refuge."

How is the U.S. countering the threat of terrorists using human
smuggling operations and finding refuge in Mexico? Rather than
securing our border generally, the government tolerates large-scale
illegal immigration, while trying to selectively stop the smuggling
operations most likely to move terrorists. The administration, Greene
told Congress, has put in place an "enforcement initiative aimed at
targeting alien smuggling organizations specializing in the movement
of U.S.-bound aliens from countries that are of interest to the
national security of the United States."

Balaghi was from Lebanon.

On June 5, 2002, he showed up, vomiting blood, at Scripps Memorial
Hospital-Chula Vista. He quickly died. When the Border Patrol heard
his symptoms, they feared radiation sickness�and dispatched an agent
with a detector to check his remains.

Balaghi was clean. But he was far from the only Middle Easterner
Boughader's ring had smuggled.

In an affidavit, Border Patrol Agent John R. Korkin said an
investigation "positively identified at least 80 Lebanese nationals
that have been, or were intercepted in the process of being, smuggled
into the U.S." by the ring. Boughader admitted in court to smuggling
more than 100. He was sentenced to one year in prison, and deported to
Mexico in November.

Almost immediately, Mexican authorities arrested him in their own
anti-smuggling case. A few days later, they arrested Ortiz.

She had worked in Mexico's foreign service for 25 years. From 1998 to
October 2001, AP reported, she was Mexico's consul in Lebanon. She
later directed the consular office in Mexico City.

She was fired in May, AP said, "after 150 Mexican passports were
stolen and two others were found to have been issued irregularly."

Jose Santiago Vasconcelos, Mexico's assistant attorney general, told
Notimex that Boughader's ring moved "a great number of Arabs" into the
United States. El Occidental, a Mexican newspaper, said it was "at
least 200."

I asked Skerlos to compare that number to the "at least 80 Lebanese
nationals" cited in Korkin's affidavit "I think it is fair to say that
the numbers we included in our affidavit were conservative," he said.

Almost a month after Ortiz was arrested, Homeland Security Secretary
Tom Ridge said: "The bottom line is, as a country we have to come to
grips with the presence of 8 to 12 million illegals, afford them some
kind of legal status some way, but also as a country decide what our
immigration policy is and then enforce it."

No, Mr. Secretary. We already have immigration laws. It's your duty to
enforce them. If the arrest of a Mexican diplomat for helping to
smuggle Arabs into the U.S. can't convince you of the need for that,
what will?

xponent
Gone South Maru
rob


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