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Violence and arrests at campus protests across the nation; CA election worker turnover has soared in recent years; Pediatricians: Watch for the rise of eating disorders in young athletes; NV tribal stakeholders push for Bahsahwahbee National Monument.

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House Democrats say they'll vote to table a motion to remove Speaker Johnson, former President Trump faces financial penalties and the threat of jail time for violating a gag order and efforts to lower the voting age gain momentum nationwide.

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Bidding begins soon for Wyoming's elk antlers, Southeastern states gained population in the past year, small rural energy projects are losing out to bigger proposals, and a rural arts cooperative is filling the gap for schools in Pennsylvania and West Virginia.

U.S. Immigration Policy Leaves Central American Migrants Vulnerable

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Wednesday, May 20, 2015   

NASHVILLE, Tenn. - A crackdown in Mexico backed by the United States may be making Central American refugees more vulnerable and not keeping them from trying to come north.

An investigation in the magazine In These Times says when large numbers of Central American children showed up in the U.S. last summer, Washington pressured Mexico to put a stop to it.

Mexico then took steps to prevent migrants from riding north on a train nicknamed La Bestia, the beast. But when freelance journalist and photographer Joseph Sorrentino investigated, he found refugees from Central America now walking north including a teenager he spoke with from El Salvador.

"I asked him why," says Sorrentino. "He said, 'I need to find work. My mother has cancer and I need to get a job.' So, a 16-year-old kid is walking for days by himself to get to the United States, to get a job to help his mother."

Critics are pressing the Obama administration to seal the border, but Sorrentino says that's impossible. In the meantime, he points out the migrants are more vulnerable on foot and many report being raped or robbed. His article is online and in the June edition of In These Times.

According to Sorrentino, these refugees face nightmarish conditions. He says they're viciously abused and violated on the road, especially the women and girls.

"Women, 60 to 70 percent of them, will be raped along the way," says Sorrentino. "Many of them get injections of birth controls because they know they have a great chance of being raped."

Last summer, critics of the Obama administration said underage migrants were coming to the U.S. to get amnesty they don't qualify for.

But Sorrentino says the refugees he talked with are under no illusions about the legal threats they'd be under in the U-S. Many told him they've lived here before, some for years. But they're fleeing what he calls "unimaginable levels of violence" in countries with some of the highest murder rates in the world.

"Until the Central American countries and Mexico, in conjunction with the United States, address the extreme poverty, extreme violence and corruption, bottom line is people are literally walking most of the way to the United States border," he says.


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