美国国家公共电台 NPR Illegal Border Crossings Are Down, And So Is Business For Smugglers(在线收听

 

RACHEL MARTIN, HOST:

President Trump has talked a lot about border security, and he's pushed a lot of money and manpower in that direction. Now, some signs that effort may be having an effect. Human trafficking along the southern U.S. border is down. In the Rio Grande Valley of Texas, apprehensions of people trying to cross illegally have fallen by 75 percent. Here's NPR's John Burnett

JOHN BURNETT, BYLINE: The human smuggler gives his first name is Orlando and his nickname as El Lobo, The Wolf. He doesn't want to give his full name because, well, what he does is unlawful.

I sit with him in a McDonald's in central Matamoros, across the border from the Texas city of Brownsville. Cartoon cutouts dangle from the ceiling, and kids play nearby. Orlando is 28 years old and wiry with a dark complexion and a habit of constantly checking his cellphone. He says business is worse than he's ever seen it.

ORLANDO: (Through interpreter) There's a lot more security on the river now. With the change in administration on the other side, it's gotten hot. There are more agents, more dogs, more trucks, more boats. We have to charge more, and fewer people want to cross.

BURNETT: The Border Patrol in the Rio Grande Valley has been surging agents to the riverside in recent weeks as part of a special operation. And as fewer unaccompanied children from Central America are asking for asylum, agents say they've been able to do less babysitting and more guarding the border, and that means The Wolf charges a premium for his services.

ORLANDO: (Through interpreter) Now I charge $4,800 to get you from Matamoros to Brownsville, before it was 2,500. My business has dropped by more than half. And if it goes down any more, I'll have to think about selling something else. Maybe I'll open up a little store or sell cars.

BURNETT: Human smuggling involves a cast of characters, and they're all paid. The Wolf paddles his clients across the river in inner tubes. Scouts stationed along the riverbank watch the Border Patrol. A safe house operator in Texas shelters the immigrants until they start the journey North. And the Gulf Cartel, which controls the drugs and people that move across the river, collects $200 a head.

The White House hopes to shut down operations like Orlando's. Trump's budget submitted to Congress last week asks for $4 billion for additional agents, new surveillance gizmos and more miles of border wall. On this point, the smuggler gives a wry smile.

ORLANDO: (Through interpreter) No matter how you look at it, it's a big expense for him. For us? We'll just jump over it.

BURNETT: There's already stout metal fencing between Brownsville and the river. Orlando shows me red friction burns on the insides of his forearms. He says he got them climbing up an iron pole and sliding down the other side before hauling his less athletic clients over using ropes. Across the river in Texas at the office of the National Border Patrol Council, I ask union official Chris Cabrera what he thinks of El Lobo's bravado.

CHRIS CABRERA: I would say the guy's probably a little full of himself. I mean, I think that wall is a barrier for him. Does it stop him? No. Does it slow him down? Yeah. Because if there was no wall, he wouldn't have any bruises and he'd get his traffic across that much easier.

BURNETT: The dramatic decline in illegal border crossings is subtly affecting life throughout this border city. The director of the Catholic-run migrant shelter in Matamoros reports his occupancy has dropped from a hundred people a night to 20, and almost all of them are deportees from the U.S.

One of the travelers staying at the shelter is Jesus Morales. He's a down-and-out construction worker from Monterrey, Mexico. He's getting a ride to a downtown plaza to look for work. He came here with the intention of swimming the river and joining his buddies on a sheet rock crew in Harlingen, Texas.

JESUS MORALES: (Speaking Spanish).

BURNETT: But Morales says some punks robbed him at the riverside, and he saw lots of green uniformed agents on the other side. Morales is broke and disconsolate. He says all he wants to do is get a bus ticket home.

MORALES: (Speaking Spanish).

BURNETT: Even those who have lived illegally in the United States and started families here are deciding it's better in Mexico.

RUBY DEGOLLADO: (Speaking Spanish).

BURNETT: Ruby Degollado is a 32-year-old mother who now lives in Reynosa, upriver from Matamoros. For 14 years, she says she lived illegally in Alamo, Texas. Her family moved back to Mexico four years ago when her husband was deported. She had been seriously considering hiring a smuggler to take her back to Texas so her U.S. citizen daughters could resume their studies at superior schools, but she's changed her mind.

DEGOLLADO: (Speaking Spanish).

BURNETT: "He doesn't want us Mexicans," she says of President Trump, "why would I want to risk it going back there?" That's one more potential customer The Wolf has lost. John Burnett, NPR News, Matamoros, Mexico.

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  原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/lesson/npr2017/6/409293.html