logo
Trump's crackdown leaves LA's undocumented migrants on brink of homelessness

Trump's crackdown leaves LA's undocumented migrants on brink of homelessness

Sinar Dailya day ago
LOS ANGELES - When her husband was arrested in an immigration raid near Los Angeles last month, Martha was abruptly separated from the father of her two daughters. But she also lost the salary that allowed her to keep a roof over their heads.
"He's the pillar of the family... he was the only one working," said the undocumented woman, using a pseudonym for fear of reprisals.
"He's no longer here to help us, to support me and my daughters."
Los Angeles, where one-third of residents are immigrants -- and several hundred thousand people are undocumented -- has been destabilised by intensifying government Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raids.
Since returning to power, US President Donald Trump has delivered on promises to launch a wide-ranging deportation drive, targeting undocumented migrants but also ensnaring many others in its net.
After her husband's arrest, 39-year-old Martha joined the ranks of people barely managing to avoid ending up on the streets of Los Angeles County -- a region with prohibitively high housing prices, and the largest number of homeless people in the United States outside New York.
Her 700-square-foot apartment in Buena Park, a suburb of the California metropolis, costs $2,050 per month. After her husband's arrest, she urgently found a minimum-wage night job in a factory to cover their most pressing needs.
It pays just enough to keep them afloat, but has left Martha unable to cover a range of obligations.
"I have to pay car insurance, phone, rent, and their expenses," she said, pointing to her daughters, aged six and seven, who need school supplies for the new academic year.
"That's a lot of expenses."
- 'Bigger storm brewing' -
How long can she keep up this punishing schedule, which allows her barely three hours of sleep on returning from the factory before having to wake and look after her daughters?
"I couldn't tell you," she said, staring blankly into space.
Los Angeles has seen some of the worst of the ICE raids. Squads of masked agents have targeted hardware stores, car washes and bus stops, arresting more than 2,200 people in June.
About 60 per cent of these had no prior criminal records, according to internal ICE documents analyzed by AFP.
Trump's anti-immigration offensive is taking an added toll on Latino workers, who were already among the worst-affected victims of the region's housing crisis, said Andrea Gonzalez, deputy director of the CLEAN Carwash Workers Center, a labor rights non-profit.
"A bigger storm is brewing. It's not just about the people that got picked up, it's about the people that are left behind as well," she said.
"There is a concern that people are going to end up on the streets."
Her organization is helping more than 300 struggling households whose incomes have plummeted, either because a family member has been arrested or because they are too afraid to return to work.
It has distributed more than $30,000 to help around 20 families who are unable to afford their rent, but covering everyone's needs is simply "not sustainable," said Gonzalez. Federal agents patrol the halls of immigration court at the Jacob K. Javitz Federal Building on Aug 5, 2025 in New York City. - (Photo by SPENCER PLATT / Getty Images via AFP)
- 'An emergency' -
Local Democratic Party leaders are trying to establish financial aid for affected families.
Los Angeles County is planning a dedicated fund to help, and city officials will also launch a fund using philanthropic donations rather than taxpayer money.
Some families should receive "a couple hundred" dollars, Mayor Karen Bass said last month.
But for Gonzalez, these initiatives do not "even scratch the surface" of what is needed, representing less than 10 percent of most affected families' rent requirements.
She called for a "moratorium on evictions" similar to one introduced during the early days of the Covid-19 pandemic.
Otherwise, Los Angeles' homeless population -- currently numbered at 72,000, which is down slightly in the past two years -- risks rising again, she warned.
"What we're living through right now is an emergency," said Gonzalez.
Maria Martinez's undocumented immigrant husband was arrested in June at a carwash in Pomona, a suburb east of Los Angeles.
Since then, the 59-year-old has had to rely on help from her children to pay her $1,800 monthly rent. Her $1,000 disability allowance falls far short.
"It is stressful," she said. "We're just getting by." - AFP
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Arrest warrant sought for South Korea's ex-first lady Kim
Arrest warrant sought for South Korea's ex-first lady Kim

The Star

time9 minutes ago

  • The Star

Arrest warrant sought for South Korea's ex-first lady Kim

South Korea's former first lady Kim Keon-hee arriving at the special prosecutor's office in Seoul on Aug 6, 2025. - Reuters SEOUL: South Korean prosecutors on Thursday (Aug 7) requested an arrest warrant for former first lady Kim Keon-hee, a day after questioning her over a litany of allegations, including bribery and stock manipulation. The move comes as former president Yoon Suk-yeol remains in detention over his declaration of martial law in December, which briefly suspended civilian rule before being overturned by parliament. "We requested an arrest warrant for Kim at 1.21pm," the special council said in a brief statement to reporters. If granted, the warrant would mark the first time in South Korean history that a former president and first lady were both arrested. The request came swiftly after the 52-year-old underwent hours-long questioning the day before. "I sincerely apologise for causing trouble despite being a person of no importance," Kim said as she arrived at the prosecutors' office on Wednesday. She denied the allegations during questioning, according to local media reports. Controversy has long surrounded Kim, with lingering questions about her alleged role in stock manipulation. A video filmed in 2022 showing her accepting a Dior handbag from a self-proclaimed fan reignited public criticism. She is also accused of interfering in the nomination process for MPs in Yoon's party, a violation of election laws. Yoon, as president, vetoed three special investigation bills passed by the opposition-controlled parliament that sought to probe the allegations against Kim, with the last veto issued in late November. A week later, Yoon declared martial law. Yoon, a former top prosecutor, was impeached and removed from office in April over his martial law declaration, prompting the country to hold a snap election in June. - AFP

World Cup host Morocco under pressure to save stray dogs
World Cup host Morocco under pressure to save stray dogs

New Straits Times

time39 minutes ago

  • New Straits Times

World Cup host Morocco under pressure to save stray dogs

TANGIERS, Morocco: Animal welfare groups have accused Morocco of culling stray dogs as it prepares to host football's 2030 World Cup, but the kingdom denies the accusations, vowing to protect the canines. Advocates have charged that Morocco was indiscriminately ridding its streets of strays ahead of the global sporting event it will jointly host with Portugal and Spain. Authorities in the North African country, however, insist they had endorsed a non-lethal method known as TNVR -- to trap, neuter, vaccinate, and then release the dogs -- aimed at reducing public health risks while controlling the stray population. And a bill aimed at protecting street animals was adopted earlier this month, still pending parliament review. It would set fines of up to US$1,500 or jail terms of up to three months for harming stray dogs, according to a copy of the bill seen by AFP. Yet the culling accusations persist as online videos show dogs being shot or poisoned with strychnine, a toxic alkaloid which is sometimes used as a pesticide. In the videos from across the country, some of the dogs appear to already have marks on their ears indicating they had been sterilised and vaccinated. Mohammed, a resident of Tangiers in Morocco's north who refused to give his last name for fear of retribution, said he witnessed a dog he had often seen in the neighbourhood where he works get poisoned and killed. "I heard her cry before I saw her die," he recalled. That dog, too, had its ear tagged, he said. An online petition launched by the International Animal Coalition to end the "violent killing of dogs on the streets and beaches of Morocco" has gathered nearly 75,000 signatures. In June, an activist interrupted a FIFA Club World Cup match, invading the pitch with a sign that read: "Morocco: stop shooting dogs and cats". France's Brigitte Bardot Foundation, created by the movie star in 1986 to promote animal protection, has called on FIFA to block Morocco from hosting the 2030 tournament. Moroccan Interior Minister Abdelouafi Laftit has decried "media attacks" against the government with "wrong and out-of-context information". Advocates say Morocco has around three million stray dogs, but no official figures exist. Each year, there are about 100,000 stray dog bites nationwide, according to official data. In 2024, authorities said 33 people died from rabies, which is often transmitted by unvaccinated animals. "Local officials still see dogs on the streets as presenting a bad image," said Salima Kadaoui, 52, who launched the Hayat project, using the TNVR method to help control the stray dog population in Tangiers and aiming at eradicating rabies. Kadaoui commended government efforts to protect animals, saying she was "fully available" to work with authorities and build up on the success of Hayat -- meaning "life" in Arabic -- which has treated more than 4,600 dogs in Tangiers alone since 2016. She said it was "essential" not to kill TNVR-tagged dogs and to return them to the same place. "They're like police against rabies. If a rabid dog shows up, they drive it away and protect the community." The government has invested more than $24 million in creating clinics capable of implementing TNVR en masse, said Mohammed Roudani, head of hygiene and green spaces at the interior ministry. One clinic is already active in Al Arjat, near the capital Rabat, where veterinarian Youssef Lhor said more than 500 dogs had been treated this year and nearly half of them released back to the areas where they had been captured. A young female dog, tagged "636", was recovering at the clinic after being sterilised, and will soon be released. "Sometimes people tell us: 'You took the dogs away, why are you bringing them back?'" said Lhor, highlighting the need for public awareness on the issue. Moroccan authorities have developed a mobile app explaining what these clinics do, and allowing users to report sightings of stray dogs.

North Korean rescued after swimming across border: Seoul
North Korean rescued after swimming across border: Seoul

The Star

time39 minutes ago

  • The Star

North Korean rescued after swimming across border: Seoul

File photo of South Korean soldiers standing guard before North Korea's Panmon Hall and the military demarcation line separating North and South Korea, at Panmunjom, in the Joint Security Area of the Demilitarized Zone. - AFP SEOUL: A North Korean defector who swam across a sea border with South Korea while reportedly tied to floating plastic has been rescued and taken into custody, Seoul authorities said Thursday (Aug 7). The North Korean managed to swim across the de facto maritime border off the western coast of the Korean peninsula on the night of July 30, South Korea's Joint Chiefs of Staff said. The border is known as the Northern Limit Line and has occasionally served as a route for North Korean defectors swimming to South Korea's Ganghwa Island. "The military identified the individual near the north of the mid-river boundary," a military official told reporters. The individual, who local media reported was tied to styrofoam when he was found, waved for help and said he wanted to defect to South Korea when asked by a South Korean naval officer, the official said. The operation took about 10 hours, according to Seoul, and the individual was rescued at around 4am on July 31. The North Korean is now in custody and has expressed their wish to defect, the defence ministry said. Ganghwa Island, located northwest of Seoul, is one of the closest South Korean territories to North Korea, with some parts of the surrounding sea lying just 10km from the maritime border between the two countries. Tens of thousands of North Koreans have fled to the South since the peninsula was divided by war in the 1950s, with most going overland to neighbouring China first, then entering a third country such as Thailand before finally making it to the South. Defections across the land border that divides the peninsula are relatively rare, as the area is densely forested, heavily mined and monitored by soldiers on both sides. But a North Korean man defected last month to the South by crossing the Military Demarcation Line. The number of successful escapes dropped significantly from 2020 after the North sealed its borders -- purportedly with shoot-on-sight orders along the frontier with China -- to prevent the spread of Covid-19. North Koreans are typically handed over to Seoul's intelligence agency for screening when they arrive in the South. - AFP

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store