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Much Ado About Breakfast!: No Borders Update Number 2
by matewan
Friday, Nov. 09, 2007 at 5:04 PM
Updates from Nov. 8 and Nov. 9 at the No Borders Camp
NO BORDERS CAMP - 9 November 2007
MIGRA OVER-REACT TO A VERY CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST
The third day of the No Borders Camp began with action, riot police and tension. After a drawn out stand-off with the migra, we were allowed to share breakfast on both sides of the camp.
During the morning Border Patrol shift change some folks decided to move the camp up to the vehicle barrier separating the two sides (which so far has been full of migra limiting our communication with one another), with the aim of serving breakfast across the border and eating together. One group locked down a table to serve food on, blocking the road through which migra vehicles have been going back and forth, while about 50 people on the U.S. side filled in the space all the way up to the barrier.
In response to this action the migra brought in three lines of riot police (with shields, batons and pepper-ball guns) who moved toward the campers but maintained some distance, while about twenty riot police crossed the fence to the Mexico side and made a formation from the All-American Canal to the highway that delineates Mexican from U.S. territory.. A Border Patrol helicopter began circling the camp and an additional 20 migra lined the vehicle barrier, preventing communication back and forth.
Due to the police reaction against the Mexico-side of the camp, people became nervous and began to make plans about how to defend the space or retreat without allowing people to get hurt or arrested. Rumors flew that the PFP (Mexico Federal Police) were in riot gear several blocks away.. A number of campers crossed over from the U.S. side to join the Mexico side, and about a dozen people climbed the border wall in the vicinity, filming what was going on and shouting/banging on the wall to show support and encouragement to the folks on the other side.
After a tense stand-off that lasted about an hour and a half the migra finally allowed us to have breakfast. The riot cops went away and plates and food were passed back and forth over the line under the watchfull eye of several dozen remaining agents. Some school kids came up to the Mexico camp and joined in the meal. And breakfast was good!
After this standoff cultural events and forums were planned throughout the day.
At 1pm about 150 people left the camp for a demonstration at the ICE detention center in El Centro, CA. Another demonstration left on the Mexico side to the maquiladora (sweat-shop) zone in Mexicali, and then the NAFTA port of entry where trucks carrying goods assembled in the maquiladoras enter the United States. There were no arrests at the ICE demonstration, no word yet on the action at the maquiladoras or port of entry.
There are, as of this morning, about 250 people on the U.S. side of the camp and 100 on the Mexico side.
At 8pm tonight there is a "Freedom of Movement" TRANSnational Dance Party planned at the camp. Tune into No Borders Radio for more.
http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2007/11/07/18458785.php
November 8, 2007:
The second day of the No Borders camp was very peaceful, despite initial concerns regarding the likelihood of police violence.
During the afternoon around 40-50 people joined the southern camp from the northern side, so that by the end of the day there were around 80 residents, and more and more people arriving all the time. We spent the day under the watchfull eye of U.S. Border Patrol and national US police but undeterred by their presence various talks and assemblies have taken place. Last night people gathered around the campfires, planning political and cultural activities for the following days.
After an emotive start with a meeting and march from the
central crossing point at the border between Mexicali (Baja California) and Calexico (California), we began the first ever bi-national No Borders camp yesterday, November 7. This date was chosen in order to commemorate the 18th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin wall.
The objective of the camp and actions is to say to all countries: NO HUMAN BEING IS ILLEGAL. Participants from the countries called Mexico, USA, Spain, Germany, Australia, and New Zealand, among others, have come to Mexicali/Calexico to camp from the 7th-11th of this month.
Yesterday's non-violent march was separated by the border wall but united by dreams of tearing it down. For almost 50 years they have separated us from the land that earlier we could freely cross, land that rightfully belongs to it's indigenous peoples.
We invite you to join this camp, where an autonomous space has been created, a space symbolically without nations, without visas and where no-one is illegal in their own land.
WE ARE FREE HUMAN BEINGS
If you would like to participate in this camp, we are situated near the intersection of Avenida Cristobal Colon and Rio Sinaloa, at the beginning of the corrugated steel border fence. For more information visit http://www.noborderscamp.org
In the following days there will be workshops, skill-shares, talks, forums, artistic expression... Bring your proposals, ideas, beans, blankets and your dreams to help with the ongoing construction of this free space for everyone.
http://www.noborderscamp.org
Border Patrol Attacks Demonstrators as No Borders Camp Closes
by repost
Tuesday, Nov. 13, 2007 at 12:07 AM
Border Patrol Attacks Demonstrators as No Borders Camp Closes
http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2007/11/11/18460208.php