CNN logo
navigation

Search Yahoo, Search CNN


Pathfinder


Main banner
rule

Illegal immigrants take heat for California wildfires

fire
Links

July 28, 1996
Web posted at: 11:45 p.m. EDT

From Correspondent Jim Hill

LOS ANGELES (CNN) -- Since January, nearly 300 wildfires have ravaged the area along the U.S.-Mexico border. While the scorching summer sun may seem the most likely culprit, fire officials in Southern California are blaming a more human element: illegal immigrants from nearby Mexico.

A program called Operation Gatekeeper has sharply reduced the flow of illegal immigrants in the Tijuana-San Diego area, prompting them to move eastward, into the steep and tinder- dry brushland of Otay Mountain, authorities say.



movie.icon (621K QuickTime movie of forest fires)

Here, in the rough and remote country, immigrants set up camp after camp as they work their way through canyons and gullies, cutting trails to avoid detection.

These trails "are all over the fire areas," says Butch Campbell of the California Department of Forestry.

campfire

"Three years ago, the Otay Mountain area was fairly natural in character," says the Bureau of Land Management's Julia Dugan. "Now if you go out there, you find that's not the case."

Littered through the landscape now: trails of old campfires, discarded water bottles and clothing.



sound.icon (213K AIFF or WAV sound of Julia Dugan)


Pointing to an influx of "almost 3,000 illegal aliens a day," San Diego County Supervisor Dianne Jacobs describes a scenario of even more fires to come.

A council of agencies has been formed to try and stop the new flow of illegal immigrants. "You've got state, local and federal agencies that are all involved," explains the U.S. Border Patrol's Ken Stit. "All working for the same goal, and that's the safety of the people on that mountain."

happy.bear

Public service warnings also are being distributed in Mexico to tell potential border-crossers of the danger.

"The idea of cooperating with this forest program is the same idea that we have in cooperating with programs on chemical spills, flooding or any other disaster," says Mexican emergency official Sergio Perez Alvarez.

One U.S. official said the real issue is controlling the U.S.-Mexico border, a hot-button topic in southern California for years.

rule

Related stories:

Related sites:

rule
What You Think Tell us what you think!

You said it...
rule
To the top

© 1996 Cable News Network, Inc.
All Rights Reserved.

Terms under which this service is provided to you.