Released 02 April
2006 By Notimex
Strike to
support undocumented people's legalization
Los Angeles, U.S., March 30, 2006
(Notimex)
The March 25 Coalition, who called for
Saturday's march in Los Angeles, announced an "American national strike."
This is part of its mobilizations to support the legalization of 12
million undocumented people in the US.
During a press conference,
the leaders of the main Hispanic organizations stated that the Los Angeles
historic march was only the beginning of a movement that will not be over
until a wide and fair immigration reform is achieved.
While
presenting their mobilizations program, the activists announced that next
April 8 there will be a great assembly of the organizations that represent
all the immigrants, in order to call for the "No-Latinos National
Day."
They stated that the strike is programmed for May 1 and it is
called the First American National Strike. This will not be exclusive,
since they will make a call any kind of organizations.
Having that
in mind, they said that a delegation will travel to Mexico to meet union
organizations in that country, in order for them to have banners
supporting undocumented workers during the May 1 (Labor Day)
celebrations.
They stated that the strike, which they consider as a
boycott, "will be cheap, workers will not leave their homes, children will
not go to school, and there will not be consumption from certain companies
that will be known, but they will only be those that have damaged
undocumented workers."
Raul Murillo, director of the National
Mexican Brotherhood in Los Angeles, stated that a delegation of some 100
organizations that participated in Saturday's march will travel to
Washington and Mexico City, in order to get more support for the
mobilization.
"The march that achieved to bring some one million
people together in Los Angeles is just the top of the iceberg, and we
won't give up or back up until the Congress and president George W. Bush
have approved the legalization of the 12 million undocumented people," he
warned.
Murillo took part in the press conference given in one of
the offices in Los Angeles for the American Federation of Labor-Congress
of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO), along with Nativo Lopez, leader or
the Mexican Brotherhood Latin America and the Mexican-American Political
Association (MAPA).
Also, in the press conference were Juan Jose
Gutierrez, director of the USA Latino Movement; Gloria Saucedo, from the
National Mexican Brotherhood in San Fernando Valley; the coalition's
spokesman, Javier Rodriguez; and Hispanic radio station host Ricardo
Sanchez, one of the march's promoters.
Sanchez stated that "during
this achievement, no one took the recognition, nor individual publicity.
We all assumed our responsibility and supported it from the beginning, and
we were inviting people every day."
On the other hand, Gutierrez
stated that although some changes may be seen in the Senate and that the
HR 4437 Sensenbrenner initiative is apparently mortally wounded, "this
movement will not stop until we reach legalization, respect, and
recognition for the immigrants work in this country."
The US
Senate's Judiciary Committee approved a wide initiative for an immigration
reform, which includes the legalization of some 11 million undocumented
immigrants.
The initiative, which was sent to the Senate to be
discussed, also covers the legalization of 1.5 million agriculture workers
in five years, a temporary workers plan for the future arrival of some 400
thousand immigrants a year, and the Dream Act, which grants special
college support for the children of undocumented people.
Also, the
plenary dismissed a controversial disposition that criminalized the
undocumented people in the US, as well as those people giving them any
kind of aid, including religious, humanitarian, and community
groups.
American congressmen are expecting for the version approved
in the Senate to be reconciled with James Sensenbrenner's proposal, which
was passed by the House of Representatives last December, and which
criminalizes undocumented immigration.
Altro testo
relativo allo stesso sciopero indetto per il primo maggio:
"El
Gran Paro Americano 2006"