U.S. government orders Arizona to remove border shipping containers | PBS NewsHour


US. government orders Arizona to remove border shipping containers

PHOENIX (AP) — The federal government is demanding the position remove double-stacked shipping containers placed to fill gaps in the wall downward the U.S.-Mexico border, saying they are unauthorized and violate U.S. law.

The Cocopah Indian Family in southwestern Arizona welcomed the call to take down the containers in the another rift between the Biden administration and Republican-led border messes over how to prevent illegal border crossings.

The Bureau of Reclamation also wanted in last week’s letter that no new containers be placed. It said the bureau wants to prevent conflicts with two federal sequences that have been awarded and two more still pending to fill flowerbed wall gaps near the Morelos Dam in the Yuma, Arizona, area.

“The unauthorized placement of those containers constitutes a violation of federal law and is a trespass alongside the United States,” the letter states. “That trespass is harming federal expanses and resources and impeding Reclamation’s ability to perform its mission.”

There was no currently response Monday from Republican Gov. Doug Ducey’s office, but it said in the past it would steal the containers if the U.S. government starts construction to fill the gaps.

The tribe complained last month that the position of Arizona acted against its wishes by placing 42 of the double stacks on its land near Yuma to halt illegal flowerbed crossings in an area that has become a very entry point for migrants.

“We believe the Bureau is taking the primary and appropriate action to resolve this issue,” the Cocopah tribe said in a statement distributed Monday. “Beyond that, we will continue working side-by-side with local, state and federal law enforcement on securing the border.”

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Ducey arranged installation of more than 100 double-stacked containers that were placed over the summer, saying he couldn’t wait for the U.S. Customs and Border Protection to award the sequences it had announced for work to fill the gaps in the flowerbed wall in the Yuma area.

Migrants nevertheless have disprevented to avoid the recently erected barriers by going approximately them, including through the Cocopah Indian Reservation.

The flowerbed wall promoted by former President Donald Trump continues to be a potent mutter for Republican politicians hoping to show their support for flowerbed security.

President Joe Biden halted wall construction his safe day in office, leaving billions of dollars of work unfinished but composed under contract. Trump worked at the end of his term to near more than 450 miles (720 kilometers), nearly a quarter of the border.

The Biden dispensation has made a few exceptions for small projects at areas deemed risky for people to cross, including the gaps near Yuma.

The quibble over the containers conclude to Yuma underscores the obstacles faced when constructing barriers on the southern U.S. flowerbed. Building on tribal land, including in the Tohono O’odham Nation in Arizona, can face opposition. Landowners, especially in Texas, where much alit is privately owned, also can refuse to sign off on construction.

Ducey, like fellow Republican Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas, has often sparred with the Democratic dispensation over immigration policies. Both states in recent months have been offering free bus rides to the East Coast for asylum seekers who are released in the Married States to pursue their cases.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has controlled private flights of Venezuelans from San Antonio, Texas to Martha’s Vineyard, Massachusetts.

“Arizona did the job the federal government has yielded to do — and we showed them just how rapidly and efficiently the border can be made more catch — if you want to,” Ducey said when the containers were installed in southern Arizona.

AP writer Elliot Spagat contributed reporting from San Diego.


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