(Fox News) – The Mexican government is warning
that Texas’ denial of birth certificates for U.S. children born here to
undocumented immigrants stands to imperil the relationship between Mexico and
the Lone Star State.
The concern was raised in an amicus brief
filed Monday evening to lend support to immigrants parents who sued Texas after
being denied birth certificates for their U.S.-born children, even after
showing their “matrículas,” the ID cards issued by the Mexican Consulate to
undocumented immigrants.
Mexico says the practice stands in stark
contrast to the historical practice among countries to accept passports or
other forms of ID to issue birth certificates.
“[It] not only jeopardizes their dignity and
well-being, but could threaten the unique relationship between Mexico and
Texas,” the Mexican government said in a brief tied to a lawsuit filed against
the state by Texas Civil Rights Project and Texas Rio Grande Legal Aid.
The lawsuit, the Texas Tribune reported, was
filed on behalf of six U.S. citizen children and their undocumented parents,
who came from Mexico, Honduras and Guatemala. Other groups since have joined
the suit.
A main point of contention is the all-out
refusal at some county registrars offices to accept as a valid form of ID
anything short of a U.S. visa or consulate ID card, the Tribune said.
The families who are suing say that Texas is
violating the 14th amendment and that the state is superseding federal
immigration laws.
Texas officials are claiming sovereignty
issues and argue that the United States cannot fight them.
They long have said that consulate-issued
identification cards are not considered reliable forms of ID.
The Mexican government is requesting that
Texas be clear about what two forms of ID it will accept in order to give the
children U.S. birth certificate.
“Our argument isn’t ‘yes matrícula, no
matrícula,’” said attorney Jennifer Harbury, who represents the families, to
the Tribune. “The argument is ‘what will you take that people can actually
get?’ They have to take something. [The children] were born here. They are U.S.
citizens.”
The amicus brief also claims that denying the
children U.S. birth certificates blocks their claims to Mexican citizenship. A
child born to Mexican parents has that right but must show proof of identity.
Infringing on that is a violation of international law, the brief states.
Mexican Consulate officials argue that the
matrícula is, in many ways, more secure because it includes biometric
technology, unlike the driver’s licenses in some states.
They say a parent’s undocumented status should
not affect a child’s ability to obtain a birth certificate.
“We think that they are not immigration authorities,”
he said. “The passport is the official way to identify oneself.”
http://www.teaparty.org/mexico-warns-tx-refuse-immigrants-babies-birth-certificates-116006/
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