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From: "Dana Aldea" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Universal,Court rules on foreign Atenco deportees,Mar 27
Date: Tue, 27 Mar 2007 20:12:52 +0200

Court rules on foreign deportees

Foreigners expelled by government officials will now have the right to have
their cases reviewed before they have to leave the country, the Supreme
Court ruled Monday

By Kelly Arthur Garrett/The Herald Mexico
El Universal
Martes 27 de marzo de 2007

Foreigners expelled by government officials will now have the right to have
their cases reviewed before they have to leave the country, the Supreme
Court ruled Monday.
In a unanimous decision, the court ministers said the nation's "amparo" laws
must apply to foreigners facing deportation by the Interior Secretariat or
the National Migration Institute (INM).

An amparo is a form of legal protection.

In this case the amparo refers to a stay of execution while the validity of
a deportation order is reviewed by a judge.

Supreme Court Minister Genaro Go'ngora Pimentel said the ruling is intended
to prevent "irregular" expulsions of foreigners in the future.

ROOTS IN ATENCO

The case grew out of the events in San Salvador Atenco last May, when two
Chileans, two Spaniards and a German were expelled from the country for
being caught near the scenes of rioting and demonstrations that occurred in
that State of Mexico town.

A federal judge ruled at the time that there were no grounds to deport the
foreigners, but INM authorities did so anyway.

The new rule will not apply to foreigners expelled from the country under
Article 33 of the Constitution, which gives the president a free hand to
deport any non-citizen he deems "inconvenient."

That presidential power, though not often exercised, will remain unaffected
by the court's ruling.

POWER OF APPEAL

Deportations ordered by migration officials, however, will fall under the
new ruling.

The court's action will ensure that any non-citizen told to leave the
country can stay long enough to confirm the order's legality.

http://www.mexiconews.com.mx/miami/23933.html

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