WASHINGTON,
March 27, 2006 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – The US Senate
Judiciary Committee is wrestling with the fate of more than 11 million
undocumented immigrants living in the country, as more marches are
being planned on Monday, March 27, to protest a new controversial bill
criminalizing illegal immigrants.
"We've
got to find some way to deal with them (immigrants)," Republican
Senator Arlen Specter, the committee's chairman, told ABC television's
"This Week" program on Sunday, March 26.
"If
they're prepared to work to become American citizens in the long line
traditionally of immigrants who have helped make this country, we can
have both a nation of laws and a welcoming nation of workers who do
some very, very important jobs for our economy."
A
bill, passed by the House of Representatives last year, would make it
a felony to be in the United States without proper papers, and a
federal crime to aid illegal immigrants.
It
also allows the construction of a 700-mile (1,126-kilometer) wall
along much of the US-Mexico border.
US
President George W. Bush, who had made immigration one of his
priorities before the 9/11 attacks, has called for "a legal way
to match willing foreign workers with willing American
employers."
He
plans to regularize the status of illegal workers who "fill jobs
that Americans will not do."
Since
the 9/11 attacks calls for tougher border security have dominated
debate over the knotty problem of controlling immigration.
Divided
Whether
or not the committee produces a bill, Majority Leader Bill Frist plans
to open two weeks of Senate debate on the issue Tuesday, March 28.
On
Sunday, Republican lawmakers grappled over the legal fate of
undocumented immigrants in the country, many of whom crossed the
southern US border with Mexico.
They
also remain divided over how to tackle immigration reform.
Lawmakers
have been divided on whether illegal immigrants should be required to
return to their home country before they become eligible for US
citizenship.
Frist
has offered a measure that would punish employers who hire illegal
immigrants and provide more visas.
It
sidesteps the issue of whether to let illegal immigrants already stay
in the United States.
But
employers and immigration advocates prefer a bill drafted by Sens.
John McCain and Edward M. Kennedy that would allow illegal immigrants
to become eligible for permanent residency after working for six
years.
Another
approach offered by Sen. John Cornyn and Jon Kyl would let illegal
immigrants get temporary work permits for up to five years.
They
would have to leave the United States but could then apply for legal
re-entry.
Unprecedented
 |
|
Rallies
in support of immigrants nationwide have astonished even
organizers. (Reuters)
|
Protests
are planned before the US Capital in Washington Monday to protest
against tightening immigration laws in a country that is home to some
11 million undocumented immigrants.
Members
of the clergy plan to wear handcuffs to protest what they said is the
criminalization of their aid programs for poor immigrants.
One
of the most powerful institutions behind the wave of public protests
has been the Roman Catholic Church, the Washington Post
reported Monday.
In
recent weeks, the church has unleashed an army of priests and
parishioners to push for the legalization of the nation's illegal
immigrants, sending thousands of postcards to members of Congress and
thousands of parishioners into the streets.
Rallies
in support of immigrants nationwide have astonished even organizers.
"It's
unbelievable," Partha Banerjee, director of the New Jersey
Immigration Policy Network, told the daily.
"People
are joining in so spontaneously, it's almost like the immigrants have
risen. I would call it a civil rights movement reborn in this
country."
Nearly
5,000 protesters marched through the streets of Los Angeles Sunday to
protest the legislation, one day after a record of half-a-million
people demanded amnesty for the undocumented immigrants.
Also
Saturday, some 100,000 people marched in Chicago, 30,000 in Milwaukee,
Wisconsin, and 15,000 in Phoenix, Arizona, against the bill.
No
Heed
Rights
advocates maintain that the proposed bill paid no heed to the fate of
millions of immigrants in the country.
"There
are 11 million people living and working in the United States. This
bill ultimately does nothing about that," said Cecilia Munoz,
vice president of the National Council of La Raza, an advocacy group
for America's Latino community.
"We
really need to deal with that reality if we're going to have a law
that's effective and that works," she told NBC.
Business
owners also complain that the bill harms their work, asserting it is
already hard for them to persuade Americans to perform the unskilled
jobs that immigrants easily fill, according to the Washington Post.
"I
don't think it's a wage situation. It's the type of work and the
nature of the work. It's hard, backbreaking work," said Bill
Trimmer of the Professional Grounds Inc., which runs a help-wanted ad
to find landscapers and groundskeepers.
"I
think we're a more affluent society now. They expect more. Everybody
expects more. . . . I have contracts, and they want an affordable
price, too."