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  • 22
    Aug
    2012
    6:00am, EDT

    Migration in the Americas: On the run from water in Panama

    Kadir van Lohuizen / NOOR

    A langouste diver in front of Carti Cohabita. Residents of the island are scheduled to evacuate in August.

    Photojournalist Kadir van Lohuizen traveled from the southern tip of South America to the far reaches of Alaska on the North American continent to explore migration in the Americas. What he found both supported and defied stereotypes, which he reported on a website and an app for iPad called Via Panam.

    Thousands of Kuna — indigenous people living in an archipelago off the northern coast of Panama — are facing a drastic lifestyle change because of rising seas.

    Kuna Yala, or Kuna Land, is comprised of 365 islands and a narrow, 250-mile-long strip of land on the Caribbean coast. Thirty-six of the islands are inhabited.

    In August, the first round of evacuations will force some Kuna to the mainland because of dangerous living conditions, affecting 65 families. Ultimately, all of the islands will be evacuated — affecting 36,000 people — and new dwellings are being built and funded on the mainland by the Panamanian government.

    Kadir van Lohuizen / NOOR

    This family has to evacuate to the mainland in August 2012.

    The inhabited islands are chock full of houses built of reeds and palm leaves and no match for storms and rising water. Historically, flooding was comparatively rare, but residents now regularly contend with surging water.

    Experts say sea levels rose nearly seven inches over the past century, and levels could rise another two feet by the end of this century.

    The Kuna have lived on the Caribbean coast in autonomy for more than 80 years. Two centuries ago, most Kunas lived on the mainland, but they relocated to the islands following an epidemic. They make their living from fishing and farming. They grow manioc, pineapples and bananas in their small fields on the mainland, but their most lucrative crop is coconuts.

    Kadir van Lohuizen / NOOR

    One of the Carti community's two political and spiritual leaders -- and his entourage -- visit the main land where the first 65 houses will be constructed.

    The Kuna form a tight-knit community, have their own language, and are well-organized. Decisions are made collectively in the Onmaked Nega — the assembly hall. Meetings are presided over by a saila, a political and spiritual leader.

    The coming evacuation was debated at the hall, and was eventually approved after long discussion. Many residents are still afraid of being tricked by the state. Because they have no financial resources to build new accommodations for themselves, they ultimately agreed to the evacuation plans.

    Kadir van Lohuizen / NOOR

    Multiple generations of this family live together on one of the islands.

    Slideshow: Migration in the Americas

    K. van Lohuizen / NOOR

    From Colombians fleeing war to North Americans retirees moving to Nicaragua, a photographer's journey from Chile to Alaska explores both the expected and unexpected patterns of migration in the Americas

    Launch slideshow

    Across the water, on the mainland, lies a 4-year-old road — the only one in the vicinity. It used to be a 12-hour walk to reach the Pan American Highway, which connects to Panama City, the country's capital. Now it takes three hours.

    As a result, many of the young Kuna have left for the capital city. Conversely many more consumer goods, like televisions and Coca-Cola, now reach Kuna Yala.

    Experience the entire journey, from Chile to Alaska, by exploring the slideshow at right, the Via Panam website or by downloading the app for iPad.

    More Photoblogs from the Migration in the Americas series:
    Mom works in US while family stays in El Salvador
    US retirees flock to Nicaragua

    Bolivia hopes for windfall from producing lithium for batteries

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    •Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

    136 comments

    The sea level isn't rising -- the islands are sinking. Rush explained it to me.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: travel, immigration, migration, panama, climate-change, world-news, via-panam
  • 21
    Aug
    2012
    6:00am, EDT

    Migration in the Americas: Bolivia hopes for windfall from producing lithium for batteries

    Kadir van Lohuizen / NOOR

    The salt flats, or Salar de Uyuni, which covers 4,000 square miles of Bolivia.

    Photojournalist Kadir van Lohuizen traveled from the southern tip of South America to the far reaches of Alaska on the North American continent to explore migration in the Americas. What he found both supported and defied stereotypes, which he reported on a website and an app for iPad called Via Panam.

    Landlocked Bolivia hasn't had much in the way of resources that it can sell to the world, but that could be about to change. It's home to the world's largest salt flat, which also is estimated to hold half the world's reserves of lithium — a light metal that's crucial for today's modern batteries for cell phones, laptops and even hybrid and electric cars.

    Kadir van Lohuizen / NOOR

    Workers at the experimental evaporation plant where the lithium is extracted bring tubes from the well to the basins. Workers are from different parts of Bolivia.

    Kadir van Lohuizen / NOOR

    Bolivian President Evo Morales celebrates the inauguration of the experimental lithium plant.

    President Evo Morales wants Bolivia to mine the site itself, albeit with some foreign help. If it can pull off the logistics, it would mean sending an army of workers from all over the country to a remote part of Bolivia along the border with Chile.

    The area is the Salar de Uyuni, which covers 4,000 square miles and where the salt layer is at least 400 feet thick.

    Bolivia started preliminary work in April 2011, employing 150 workers. But progress has slowed, in part because the site still lacks a stable electricity supply.

    Kadir van Lohuizen / NOOR

    Due to heavy rainfall, much of the Salar de Uyuni is still covered with water. A tractor brings the workers to the experimental evaporation plant.

    Slideshow: Migration in the Americas

    K. van Lohuizen / NOOR

    From Colombians fleeing war to North Americans retirees moving to Nicaragua, a photographer's journey from Chile to Alaska explores both the expected and unexpected patterns of migration in the Americas

    Launch slideshow

    Japan, potentially a major buyer, recently urged Bolivia to speed up the project and meet its goal of a 6-month test run before moving on to commercial production.

    Bolivia also faces competition from lithium mines in neighboring Chile and Argentina.

    Still, it did get a boost in July when a South Korean company said it would help provide technology and training of workers.

    Experience the entire journey, from Chile to Alaska, by exploring the slideshow at right, the Via Panam website or by downloading the app for iPad.

    More Photoblogs from the Migration in the Americas series:
    Mom works in US while family stays in El Salvador
    US retirees flock to Nicaragua
    On the run from water in Panama

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    •Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

    26 comments

    big windfall for the companies involved, pennies for the workers same as always business as usual

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    Explore related topics: travel, immigration, bolivia, migration, south-america, world-news, lithium, via-panam
  • 15
    Aug
    2012
    3:04pm, EDT

    Thousands of 'Dreamers' line up to apply for deferral program

    Kevork Djansezian / Getty Images

    Hundreds of people line up around the block from the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles offices to apply for deportation reprieve on August 15, in Los Angeles, California. Under a new program established by the Obama administration undocumented youth who qualify for the program, called Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, can file applications from the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services website to avoid deportation and obtain the right to work

    Jonathan Alcorn / Reuters

    People line up for assistance with paperwork for the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program at the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles in Los Angeles, California, August 15. The U.S. government began accepting applications on Wednesday from young illegal immigrants seeking temporary legal status under relaxed deportation rules announced by the Obama administration in June.

    Richard Drew / AP

    People fill the hall of St. Mary's Church attending an orientation workshop and legal clinic for potential deferred action applicants, on New York's Lower East Side on Aug. 15, 2012. Hundreds of thousands of young illegal immigrants scrambled to get papers in order Wednesday as the U.S. started accepting applications to allow them to avoid deportation and get a work permit under a new government program.

    Kevork Djansezian / Getty Images

    A group of immigrants, known as DREAMers, hold flowers as they listen to a news conference to kick off a new program called Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals at the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles on August 15, 2012 in Los Angeles, California. Under a new program established by the Obama administration undocumented youth who qualify for the program, called Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, can file applications from the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services website to avoid deportation and obtain the right to work

     

    Related links:

    • Chasing a 'dream': Immigrant youth seek legal status
    • Young illegal immigrants line up for chance to legally stay, work in US under new deferral program
    • Read more Immigration" stories here.

     

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    •Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

    8 comments

    I don't know what you are talking about.

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    Explore related topics: immigration, politics, society, us-news, deportation, featured
  • 15
    Jun
    2012
    6:42pm, EDT

    Undocumented UCLA students gather at church for graduation ceremony

    Jonathan Alcorn / Reuters

    Undocumented UCLA students stand in line at a graduation ceremony for UCLA "Dreamers", or Dream Act students, at a church near the campus in Los Angeles on Friday. Undocumented youths who came to the United States as children reacted with joy to an Obama administration rule change on Friday that could spare them deportation, although opponents slammed it as amnesty.

    Jonathan Alcorn / Reuters

    Wendy Ito, an undocumented UCLA student, prepares for a graduation ceremony for "Dreamers" or Dream Act students at a church near the campus in Los Angeles.

    Jonathan Alcorn / Reuters

    Undocumented UCLA students attend a graduation ceremony for "Dreamers" or Dream Act students at a church near the campus in Los Angeles.

    Miranda Leitsinger reports that some illegal immigrants reacted with joy, and others with skepticism, to the Obama administration's announcement that it would no longer seek the deportation of most undocumented youth:

    The announcement represented a major policy shift, and its political implications will be significant.

    Cesar Vargas, who started DRM Capitol Group, LLC, to advocate for people in his position -- he illegally entered the country from Mexico when he was 5 years old -- welcomed Obama’s announcement: “We’re speechless.”

    “A lot of the work that dreamers have been doing … it’s showing fruit, so we’re a little bit shocked, a little surprised and definitely excited,” said Vargas, 28.

    •Sign up for the msnbc.com Photos Newsletter

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    13 comments

    Want to know the most obvious difference between China and the US today? The Chinese can put a man (and a woman!) in space and we can't. So SURE! Round 'em up and send 'em back! Who needs the increased taxable income these college grads will provide here in the States over their lifetime? Who needs  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: immigration, student, politics, ucla, california, los-angeles, us-news, graduation
  • 25
    Apr
    2012
    2:00pm, EDT

    Both sides of the immigration debate argue outside Supreme Court

    Charles Dharapak / AP

    Coelis Mendoza, from Ithaca, N.Y., who is opposed to Arizona's immigration law argues with Marietta Barbier Falzgraf of Bethesda, Md., a supporter, outside the Supreme Court on April 25, where the court held a hearing on Arizona's "show me your papers" immigration law.

    Mark Wilson / Getty Images

    Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer speaks to the media after arguments at the U.S. Supreme Court.

    Charles Dharapak / AP

    Supporters of immigrant rights rally outside the Supreme Court.

    Charles Dharapak / AP

    Charles Balogh, from Alexandria, Va., demonstrates in front of the Supreme Court as the court holds a hearing on Arizona's "show me your papers" immigration law.

    U.S. Supreme Court hears oral arguments Wednesday on SB 1070, a bill signed by Gov. Jan Brewer in April 2010 to help authorities drive illegal immigrants out of Arizona.

    Arizona says it enacted SB 1070 because the federal government has failed to stop an influx of illegal immigrants from Mexico. It says its law doesn’t conflict with federal statute, and in fact does specifically what the federal law is supposed to do.

    Implementation of the most controversial sections  -- including a requirement that local police check the immigration status of a criminal suspect if they have “reasonable suspicion” that person is in the country illegally -- has been put on hold by lower courts pending action by the Supreme Court.

    --NBC News and msnbc.com staff

    Paul Clement, the lawyer for Arizona in the immigration law case in front of the Supreme Court, talks to reporters after oral arguments.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    •Sign up for the msnbc.com Photos Newsletter

    1 comment

    Discusion, debate, conversation, dialog is good for the country - but I read in another article that at one point BOTH sides sang the National Anthem - so there was agreement on that small point - baby steps

    Show more
    Explore related topics: immigration, supreme-court, us-news
  • 16
    Mar
    2012
    3:54pm, EDT

    A new US citizen, years after a 9/11 hate crime killed her husband

    Matt Rourke / AP

    Durreshahwar Hasan smiles along with her daughter, Asna, left, grandson, Abdullah, 3, daughters Iqra, center, and Nida holding her daughter Hafsa, six months, after their naturalization ceremony at the office of U.S. Rep. Rush Holt, D-N.J., on Friday in West Windsor, N.J. Hasan, the widow of a Pakistani immigrant killed by a white supremacist in a 9/11 revenge attack, became a U.S. citizen along with her daughters Friday.

    Matt Rourke / AP

    Durreshahwar Hasan holds a handful of flags after a naturalization ceremony.

    Samantha Henry of the Associated Press reports that the naturalization of Hasan's family was, according to his daughter, the 'fulfillment of their father's dream for his children': 

    Durree Hasan said neighbors brought food, called, wrote letters and attended a candlelight vigil in the rain in the days after her husband was killed. She remembers being deeply moved by the elderly, frail woman who lived next door and showed up to support the family at the vigil.

    "It never occurred to us we'd have to leave," Durree Hasan said. "It's home life to us; especially New Jersey and Milltown, we never thought to leave, even to another town. It's a very small town, but like a big family; very supportive."

    U.S. Rep. Rush Holt, whose intervention in 2004 gave them permanent legal residency, hosted the naturalization ceremony Friday. Holt said he was horrified at hearing of Hasan's killing and then realizing the family was facing deportation.

    "It's a story of bravery, perseverance and ultimately, I think it's a story of justice and compassion," Holt said. "Our laws have imperfections, but America continues to strive toward fairness and community and compassion, and that's what you see today."

     Follow @msnbc_pictures

    3 comments

    I do not care what anyone says, I would keep an eye on any ragger wearing a camoflage obi-dobi outfit.

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    Explore related topics: pakistan, immigration, new-jersey, us-news, 9-11, hasan
  • 16
    Feb
    2012
    6:45pm, EST

    African migrants tortured in Egypt desert

    Oded Balilty / AP

    Sudanese Mutasim Qamrawi, 22, shows his scars from the four months he was held in captivity by smugglers in Egypt's Sinai desert at a shelter in Tel Aviv, Israel, on Feb. 16.

    Oded Balilty / AP

    Sudanese Mutasim Qamrawi is among the growing number of African migrants who say they were captured, held hostage and tortured by Egyptian smugglers hired to sneak them into Israel.

    By Jon Sweeney, NBC News

    Mutasim Qamrawi, a 22-year-old from Sudan, is among a growing number of African migrants reporting they were tortured in Egypt's Sinai desert by smugglers despite promises to sneak them into Israel, where they hoped to find freedom and a decent job. The smugglers then extorted the migrants' families for more money.

    Human rights advocates say the situation is worsening, because smugglers are using harsher torture methods and demanding more money — as much as $40,000.

    Some 50,000 Africans have entered Israel in recent years, fleeing conflict and poverty in search of safety and opportunity in the relatively prosperous Jewish state. They need the smugglers' help to navigate the rugged Sinai desert and reach Israel's border.

    -- The Associated Press contributed to this blog post

    Oded Balilty / AP

    African refugees keep themselves warm at a shelter in Tel Aviv on Feb. 16. Some 50,000 Africans have entered Israel in recent years, fleeing conflict and poverty.

    Oded Balilty / AP

    African refugees share breakfast at a shelter in Tel Aviv on Feb. 16.

    Related Links:

    • African migrants tortured in Egypt's Sinai desert
    • Africa World News page on msnbc.com

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: egypt, israel, immigration, africa, world-news
  • 1
    Feb
    2012
    12:23pm, EST

    Documenting Moscow's migrant workforce

    Denis Sinyakov / Reuters

    A migrant worker wearing a Russian cartoon hero 'Luntik' costume takes a break from his work of distributing advertising leaflets at metro station in Moscow on Nov. 23, 2011.

    Reuters photographer Denis Sinyakov spent nine months documenting the lives of Russia's enormous and mostly illegal migrant work force in the lead up to presidential elections that take place next month.

    Russia’s demographic situation is one of the many contributing factors to the uncertainty facing the country. Not only does Russia have a decreasing population, but the chaos of the 1990s has created a situation where there are fewer young adults now than should be expected in a standard population. The result is a small, indigenous labor pool and a large influx of migrant workers to fill the gap. These workers are mainly from former Soviet countries in Central Asia – Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan – places with their own economic problems, which also encourages migration.

    Denis Sinyakov, Reuters photographer based in Moscow writes:

    Denis Sinyakov / Reuters

    Migrant workers work unload potato sacks at a vegetable market on the outskirts of Moscow on Nov. 11 2011.

    Denis Sinyakov / Reuters

    Migrants workers from Tajikistan relax on the roof of their shelter after working at local market outside Moscow, July 18 2011.

    I don’t remember a time when Moscow hasn’t been flooded with them, migrants from Central Asia.

     When I moved here in 1997 they were already here. They had started appearing more than 20 years ago, the time when the Soviet Union was falling apart. Some fled civil wars, but more usually they were escaping the awful economic situation in their homelands. Not exactly an escape, but they came to make some money, leaving their families at home. The economic situation in Russia even now isn't enviable, at the beginning of the 1990s it was woeful, but none the less better than there.

     Muscovites have got used to living with them, used to regarding them as low qualified workers, as street sweepers and lorry loaders, cheap muscle on building sites. People are used to calling them “churki” and “sheep” and not finding those words in any way offensive.

    Muscovites are generally not very tolerant people towards aliens, and aren't very fond of newcomers from the varied different regions of the Russian federation, or the Caucuses or from Central Asia. But only the latter group has it become habitual to offend in public.

     When I started to shoot this story I saw the following scene:  two women arguing about a dog belonging to one of them that was swimming with children in a river one hot July day.  In the same place migrants from Tajikistan were swimming, they were about half of the bathers present.

    The women were shouting and arguing for a long time about the hygiene of the dog. Bystanders became involved and eventually sided with the dog owner, arguing that it was permissible since there were already several “darkies” swimming in the same place, so the water could hardly be considered clean. The darkies, deeply tanned only on their necks and forearms, listened silently and continued swimming and didn't pay any attention to what was happening. Everybody is used to it, but I felt deeply ashamed.

     That's what I wanted to photograph, but it seemed impossible. The unpleasantness of locals to the immigrants is an intangible, a mentality ingrained as part of the status quo, easy to seem unremarkable and by its nature unnoticed. However there are so many aspects to this relationship that reflect a multitude of issues confronting Russia at the beginning of the 21st century.

    Denis Sinyakov / Reuters

    Muslim migrant workers attend special prayers on the first day of the Muslim holiday Eid al-Adha in Moscow on Nov. 6 2011

    Denis Sinyakov / Reuters

    Migrant workers from Tajikistan bathe in the Yauza river outside Moscow, July 6 2011

    Denis Sinyakov / Reuters

    Migrants workers from Tajikistan gather in a shelter to watch TV after working at a local market outside Moscow, July 6 2011.

    Click here see more of Denis Sinyakov's photographs of "Russia's Untouchables" and read more about his experience covering the story.

    Related Links:

    • Putin: Crackdown needed on illegal immigration

     

    17 comments

    Wow it all sounds so familiar. In the US it's anyone south of the border. In parts of Europe it's the Turks that are treated this way.

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    Explore related topics: russia, immigration, politics, world-news, moscow, featured
  • 1
    Nov
    2011
    1:04pm, EDT

    Deportation threat draws tears, support for teen immigrant

    By Jonathan Woods, msnbc.com

    Our coverage is so often dominated by immigration issues between the U.S. and Mexico, I was moved by these images from the Netherlands we received today.

    The central figure in this story is a boy named Mauro Manuel. According to the BBC, his mother brought him to the Netherlands as a child, hoping he would have a better life than in their war-torn home of Angola.

    Upon his arrival, he was picked up by police and eventually fostered by a family in Limburg.

    Now that he has reached adulthood, Dutch immigration law states he is to be deported, but supporters are arguing that he should be able to stay.

    Koen Van Weel / EPA

    Tears stream down the face of Mauro Manuel, a young Angolan asylum-seeker in The Hague, Netherlands, on Tuesday, Nov. 1.

    Koen Van Weel / EPA

    Supporters stand beside Angolan asylum-seeker, Mauro Manuel as he hugs his foster mother, Anita Marijanovic, in front of his step-father, Hans Mandigers, at a rally in The Hague, Netherlands on Nov. 1. Sympathizers are appealing so Manuel can stay in The Netherlands today, as the Dutch Lower House of Parliament debates the fate of the 18-year-old's future.

    More from this compelling and polarizing story, carrying far-reaching implications on immigrants abroad, can be found at the BBC.

    6 comments

    Heartbreaking.

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    Explore related topics: netherlands, immigration, world-news, angola
  • 21
    Apr
    2011
    6:33am, EDT

    Rioters set fire to Australian detention center

    SYDNEY — Asylum seekers and other detainees at an Australian immigration center set fire to several buildings, climbed onto rooftops and hurled tiles at officials who were scrambling on Thursday to bring the chaotic protest to an end.

    Rick Rycroft / AP

    Fellow detainees grab onto a man, second left, and remove a wire he had around his neck that is tied to a vent, after he threatened to jump from a rooftop at the Villawood Detention Center in Sydney, Australia on April 21.

    Brami Jegan / EPA

    Burning buildings at the Villawood Detention Centre, set alight during a protest by up to 100 immigration detainees in the early hours of the morning. The riot began on 20 April, when asylum seekers took to a building's roof reportedly in protest to the department denying their visa applications.

    Tim Wimborne / Reuters

    Detainees hold a protest sign atop a building at Villawood detention centre on April 21. Angry asylum-seekers torched an immigration detention centre in Sydney on Thursday, burning part of it to the ground after Australian authorities denied some of their requests for refuge, local media reported.

    Up to 100 people being held at Sydney's Villawood Detention Center were involved in the riots, which began Wednesday night when two detainees climbed onto a roof, immigration officials said.

    Protesters set an oxygen cylinder alight, which led to an explosion, and nine buildings — including a medical center and dining hall — were gutted by fire. Firefighters brought the blaze under control early Thursday and no one was injured. Continue reading.

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: immigration, migration, australia, protest, world-news, sydney, asylum, oceania, villawood-detention-center
  • 1
    Mar
    2011
    4:14pm, EST

    African workers, some robbed in recent violence, stuck in Libya

    Here's the latest story from Libya about refugees at the border, and another story about rebels' intention to fight Gadhafi's forces.

    John Moore / Getty Images

    Stranded foreign worker Seuleu Felicite from Cameroon weeps in a shelter on March 1, 2011 in Benghazi, Libya. The housekeeper said that she and her brothers, also laborers, were robbed of all their savings and passports during attacks on foreign workers during the uprising a week ago.

    John Moore / Getty Images

    Stranded foreign workers from west Africa sit in cramped conditions in a temporary shelter on March 1, 2011 in Benghazi, Libya. Thousands of foreign laborers have been stuck in Benghazi, trying to flee the violence but without transportation out of the country.

    1 comment

    WGAF

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    Explore related topics: libya, immigration, world-news
  • 3
    Feb
    2011
    5:30am, EST

    Guillermo Arias / AP

    A deported migrant climbs the U.S.- Mexico border fence as he prepares for the 6th annual Marcha Migrante, or Migrant March, in Tijuana, Mexico, Wednesday, Feb. 2.

    On the border: The 6th annual Migrant March kicks off

    By Elena Grothe

    The Marcha Migrante, or Migrant March, began yesterday in San Diego and Playas Tijuana. According to the AP, the Tijuana to Mexicali pilgrimage is organized by the group Border Angels to raise awareness on immigration issues. Marchers are demanding a stop of nighttime deportations and human rights abuses by police on both sides of the border. Read more about Marche Migrante from The San Diego Union-Tribune.

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: mexico, immigration, border, us-news
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Jonathan Woods worked for msnbc.com for three years, ending in 2012. For six years prior he worked as a photojournalist and multimedia producer for four newspapers across the U.S., including the Rocky Mountain News in Denver. Woods earned his B.A. in photojournalism from Western Kentucky University. He is now working for TIME Magazine, leading a team of picture editors online for TIME.com.

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