Operation Hold the Line 1993

Operation Hold the Line 1993

The image shows the U.S. Border Patrol and protesters during Operation Hold the Line in 1993 on the Paso del Norte International Bridge. Operation Hold the Line was a preventative measure taken by the United States Border Patrol, initiated on September 19, 1993, on the United States-Mexico border in El Paso. Silvestre Reyes, who was the head of the El Paso Border Control at the time, ordered his officers to form a human and vehicle blockade along the border. There were four hundred agents and vehicles every 100 yards from one side of El Paso to the other, creating a virtual and visible human wall of enforcement, in order to prevent illegal immigration. Unlike the previous attempts, Reyes’ blockade stayed in place until the Immigration and Naturalization Service saw the success it was having and permanently funded it. It is still in effect today. The rise of illegal immigration from Mexico to the U.S. during the 1980s and 1990s was caused by the collapse of the Mexican economy due to inflation. El Paso's Border Patrol agents, which numbered 600 then, were overwhelmed by the number of migrants rushing across the border daily. The Operation was the first of its kind and represented a shift in ideology in policing illegal immigration. Previous policies focused on finding and deporting illegal immigrants who had already crossed the border. Instead, Operation Hold the Line focused on intercepting and preventing illegal entries at the border. The Operation affected El Paso and the surrounding areas instantly and in different ways: On one hand, the apprehensions in the El Paso sector dropped significantly (from about 1,500 people a day to less than 100 a day). The success of the Operation led to the introduction of legislation that focused on border security. On the other hand, the number of immigrants who die trying to cross the border has risen significantly, because they attempt to cross the border in remote desert areas, which have less security. Also, illegal immigrants, who successfully cross the border, stay in the United States longer than before, rather than risking arrest traveling back and forth from Mexico. During the first weeks of the Operation, there were protests on both sides of the border, and the Catholic bishops of Southern New Mexico, El Paso and Juárez came out against it. Hundreds of Juárez residents took part in demonstrations because they could no longer get to their jobs in El Paso. Consequently, one of the immediate effects was also that it left thousands of people from Juarez unemployed, who had been crossing the border daily for their jobs in El Paso. About a week into the operation, there was a standoff between protesters and U.S. officials at the Paso del Norte International Bridge. They threatened to pour into the north, and the Border Patrol had to shut down one side of the bridge.

Área: Central / Downtown

Fuente: C.L. Sonnichsen Special Collections, University of Texas at El Paso Library. Collection Name: El Paso Times 1994 Operation Hold the Line. Photo ID: PH032-9-21B-020.

Cargado por: UTEP Library Special Collections

Comentarios

Hacer un comentario
Gracias por su comentario

Reportar esta entrada

Elige la razón más importante para este reporte

Tu nombre

Tu correo electrónico

Detalle opcional

Gracias por su reporte

Más sobre la misma comunidad-colección

Explore, Experience, Enjoy El Paso Del Norte Region

Video of El Paso, Texas and its people.

Explore, Experience, Enjoy El Paso Del Norte Region I

Video of El Paso, Texas in the year 2012.

El Paso Museum of Art

Outside image of the El Paso Museum of Art located downtown El ...

El Paso Museum of Art

El Paso Museum of Art located in downtown El Paso, Texas.

El Paso Museum of Art

El Paso Museum of Art located in downtown El Paso, Texas.

El Paso Museum of Art

El Paso Museum of Art located in downtown El Paso, Texas

Man Killing Intersection of The American West - Video

Story told by Leon Metz. "Man Killing Intersection Of The ...

Tiroteo Bill Johnson - Video

Bill Johnson Shootout in the year 1881.

Cuatro Muertos en Cinco Segundos - Video

Gunfight--"Four Dead In Five Seconds". Occurred on April 14, ...

La Plaza de San Jacinto 2011

San Jacinto Plaza as it appeared in 2011 before renovation.

Fray Garcia De San Francisco - El Paso, Texas

On September 26, 1996, Houser installed in downtown El Paso, a ...

El Union Depot de El Paso

Opened in 1906 and is currently operating under Amtrak's Texas ...

DIGIE

Construction continues in the month of December 2014.

DIGIE

Construction continues for Digie--Dec 1, 2014.

DIGIE

Construction continues --Dec 1, 2014.

Teatro Plaza

Plaza Theatre is a beautifully restored theatre which brings ...

St. Luke's Hospital - El Paso, Texas

The image shows the St. Luke's Hospital in the 1900s. It was one ...

New Hotel Dieu Hospital

The image shows Hotel Dieu in 1953. It was situated at the ...

Hotel Dieu Hospital, El Paso, TX circa 1900

The image shows Hotel Dieu to the upper left of the image. It ...

Old Providence Hospital

The photograph shows the Old Providence Hospital, probably in ...

Excelsior Sanatorium

The image shows Excelsior Sanatorium, at the corner of Missouri ...

Art Figure and EPMH

The image shows the El Paso Museum of History in the background ...

Southwest University Ball Park - Clock - El Paso, Texas

Mary Mead Lynch- the inspiration for Insights,was a dreamer, a ...

home.search_collection