Undocumented military veteran granted citizenship

Latest

Deported Veterans Support House in Tijuana, for deported U.S. veterans. People are celebrating that a decorated U.S. Army paratrooper was just allowed to return home to the U.S. as a Tijuana area.
PHOTO/EDUARDO CASTRO

 
FRESNO, CA — On April 13, Comrade Hector Barajas, a decorated U.S. Army paratrooper, was allowed to return to the United States. He participated in a ceremony that allowed him to become a naturalized U.S. citizen.
After his honorable discharge in 2001, he was later charged with shooting a gun at a car. As a green card holder, you cannot be found guilty of any crime. If found guilty, one can be denied U.S. citizenship. He spent two years in prison and, once released, he was deported to Tijuana, Mexico with no family ties there. It was while in Tijuana that he decided to work on the unjust treatment of undocumented veterans there.
The bunker, as they call it, provides assistance in areas of food, shelter, clothing and work as a resource center as they adjust to life in the country where they reside. They advocate for political legislation which would prohibit the deportation of U.S. personnel, both former and current, and repatriation to a country they are willing to die for. Presently, there are about 200 to 350 known veterans in the area of Tijuana still in limbo. They call this place the Deported Veterans Support House.
At the press conference, Hector thanked those who helped in his return to the United States to become a naturalized citizen. This included Congressman Mark Takano from San Diego, the ACLU from San Diego and others who advocated for him to become a naturalized citizen
Congressman Mark Takano, who helped in his release to become a naturalized citizen, spoke about the cruel treatment of ICE causing separation of family members—in Hector’s case, his daughter and parents. This separation of family members also can apply to DACA recipients and others in this country illegally who can be deported at any time. This shows a lack of humanitarian concern by ICE for those without any type of legal protection.
A recent incident occurred where Lance Corporal Enrique Salas, an undocumented honorably discharged military veteran, died from a car accident in Tijuana. Because he had no legal status in the United States, he could not receive medical treatment from a U.S. military medical facility and died in Tijuana on April 13. His body was allowed to be returned to his family in the United States after his death. There is an uncaring immigration policy where a simple mistake can make the difference between living with family in the country where one lives and takes an oath to protect, or a life time of banishment to a foreign country without family and appropriate medical care.
As a Viet Nam veteran, I can see the injustice that the U.S. government is capable of doing. Through the draft and joining voluntarily, young men go out and fight for this country. Some pay the price of death. In reality, it is done to make war profiteers richer at any cost, including lost human life. They see the soldier as expendable. It is only by joining and working together can we work toward stopping the war machine and creating a peaceful nation.

+ Articles by this author

Free to republish but please credit the People's Tribune. Visit us at www.peoplestribune.org, email peoplestribune@gmail.com, or call 773-486-3551.

The People’s Tribune brings you articles written by individuals or organizations, along with our own reporting. Bylined articles reflect the views of the authors. Unsigned articles reflect the views of the editorial board. Please credit the source when sharing: ©2024 peoplestribune.org. Please donate to help us keep bringing you voices of the movement. Click here. We’re all volunteer, no paid staff.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Featured

An All-American Nightmare

The machinery of mass deportation has been set up in a nightmarish fashion. It is meant to be impossible to stop — or to appear that way. But, like any machine, it can be brought to a halt, when understood.

As ICE Jails Palestinian Protester, Universities Must Commit to Academic Freedom

University faculty call on everyone, on behalf of Mahmoud Khalil, Columbia graduate detained by ICE, to organize on behalf of those who are today's targets, supporting academic freedom and free expression before it is too late.

‘Fetal Personhood’ Laws Could Lead to Death Penalty for Abortions

Lawmakers in nine states have or are working to introduce bills to allow homicide charges against people suspected of having an abortion. Six of those states all have the death penalty for homicide.

Black History Month 2025: Now More Than Ever!

Black History Month 2025 is taking place in the midst of a vicious campaign by the Trump administration to incite hatred against African Americans and other people of color. From colonial times until the present, the attacks on the working class as a whole have always started as attacks on Black workers.

‘Jocelynn Deserves Justice!’: 11-Year-Old Texan Kills Herself After Bullies’ Deportation Threats

An 11-year-old Texas girl took her own life after being bullied by classmates who threatened to call immigration authorities to deport her mother.

More from the People's Tribune