Now that more Mexicans are failing to make it across the northern border, or find themselves back in Mexico after being deported from the United States, it's time for the Mexican government to demonstrate that it—and not the U.S. government—is primarily responsible for the welfare of its citizens.
Raymundo Pacheco, 28, is a Mexican citizen deserving of government help. In June Pacheco, originally from Santa Cruz Nexila, a small indigenous village in central Oaxaca, was deported from California to Tijuana. Since 2002 Pacheco had been working as a farmworker in the fields of Salinas Valley in California. His father, Primo Pacheco, and other members of his extended family continue working there, unable to visit Raymundo for fear that they would be unable to cross again into the United States.
Deposited across the border with no money, no local family ties, and no job, Pacheco had nowhere to go. So he joined the rising population of homeless immigrant men, women, and children in Tijuana.
Today, Pacheco lies in an intensive care unit at the Red Cross hospital in Tijuana. An organization of fellow Oaxacans in San Diego is trying to raise money for the unfortunate farmworker. That's because Pacheco no longer has a chance of finding a job himself, and it's unlikely that he'll ever work again, on either side of the border.
Last week, on July 5, the homeless Pacheco was run over by a cargo train, losing both his legs, his left arm, and part of his right arm. Walking along the train tracks, he was pulled under, losing first his legs, and then his arms as he tried to pull himself free.
The Red Cross after numerous attempts was finally able to locate Pacheco's remaining family in Santa Cruz Nexila, and his mother and sister have arrived to be with him in the hospital.
Family and friends have opened a bank account in Tijuana to accept donations. The account at Banamex is No. 284-7575762 (inter-bank wire transfer code: 002 028028475757623), and it's in the name of Pacheco's mother, Otilia Barrios Morales.
What's Mexico Got To Do With It?
What's this have to do with the Mexican government? Nothing, and everything.
Successive presidents in Mexico, joined by a chorus of intellectuals, media voices, and all the political elite, criticize U.S. immigration and border control policy at every opportunity.
Soon after becoming president, Felipe Calderón, criticizing proposals for a border fence, had this advice for the United States: "But at the same time we do consider in a respectful way that it would be better to stop the migration by building a kilometer of highway in Michoacán or Zacatecas than 10 kilometers of walls on the border."
There's much to criticize about U.S. immigration and border control policies, including the practice of deporting hardworking women and men, like Pacheco, who are picking the food Americans eat.
But when it comes to the immigration crisis the Mexican government should spend more time getting its own house in order. For starters, the Calderón government should acknowledge that the problem begins at home, not across the border.
Mexico's main export is its own people.
Almost 30 million residents and citizens in the United States are direct descendants of Mexican migrants, according to a report by the Mexican government.
And of Mexico's estimated 107 million people, about 10% live in the United States, and 15% of Mexico's labor force works in the United States.
In Mexico, economic crisis in the early 1980s set off the upswing, and in the 1990s a combination of an economic boom in the United States, adverse impact of structural adjustment and liberalization in Mexico, and draw of a liberal immigration policy (including family reunification visas) dramatically increased the annual immigration flows.
