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WASHINGTON, May 1 (Xinhua) -- Hundreds of
thousands of illegal immigrants and their supporters staged rallies, marches and
boycotts across the United States Monday, in a renewed effort to claim their
rights to stay in the country.
"We are also Americans. We work here and contribute
to the economy. We are here to ask for our due rights," a young female
demonstrator giving only the first name Mary from El Salvador, told Xinhua at an
emotional rally in the Meridian Hill Park in northern Washington DC.
An approximately 1,000 people attended the rally,
holding placards that read "full rights for all immigrants," waving flags both
of the U.S. and their native countries and wearing T-shirts with the slogan
"legalization, justice and dignity."
Many of them left their workplaces to take part in
the nationwide Latino boycott called "a day without immigrants," which also
staged acts like closing down shops, rejecting buying commodities and skipping
school classes.
Dante Strobino, a workers' rights activist from the
nearby North Carolina, said he and other organizers brought some 300 immigrant
workers here for the event.
He said the immigrant workers should be treated
equally with any other workers and called Monday's rallies "part of the U.S.
civil rights movement."
Some U.S. citizens, like Julia Finkelstein from the
Farm Labor Organizing Committee in North Carolina, said the illegal immigrants
are doing the right thing by asking for the legalization of their status.
"They are taking the jobs that most Americans
wouldn't do and there is no law to protect them. Things ought to change," she
said.
U.S. media reported rallies of different scales were
being held in some 60 cities throughout the day.
In Chicago, Illinois, about 300,000 demonstrators
showed up in one of the biggest rallies around the country while in Los Angeles,
California, up to 1 million people participated in two separate marches.
In New York, thousands of workers took work breaks
for about 20 minutes to form "human chains" throughout the city's five boroughs,
linking arms with shoppers, restaurant-goers and other supporters.
In New Orleans, Louisiana, several thousand
demonstrators attended a rally, carrying signs that read "Proud to rebuild" and
"We come to work."
In southern Florida, thousands of protesters gathered
in a vacant lot in Homestead, a community with a large Mexican population.
Many farm workers stayed home, handicapping one of
the biggest industries in Salinas, California, a largely Latino city.
Although the impact of the boycott is too early to be
assessed, some big businesses are already shutting down operations as workers
leave their posts. Six of 14 Perdue Farms plants are forced to close while Tyson
Foods Inc., the world's largest meat producer, shut five of its nine beef plants
and four of its six pork plants.
An estimated 7.2 million illegal immigrants are now
working in the United States, making up 4.9 percent of the overall labor force,
according to a recent study by the Pew Hispanic Center. Other estimates put the
number at more than 11 million.
The protests began in March, stirred by a
congressional bill that would make employing illegal immigrants a felon and wall
up over a third of the U.S.-Mexican border to prevent illegal border-crossing.
The bill was passed by the House of Representatives
in December 2005 but has got stuck at the Senate.
In April, Senate passed a compromise bill aiming to
toughen the legalization process for illegal immigrants who have been in the
country less than five years.
But the bill was stalled when Senate Minority Leader
Harry Reidobjected to Majority Leader Bill Frist's decision to let Republican
senators offer amendments to the measure.
Meanwhile, the immigration debate has split
Republicans as midterm elections approach.
U.S. President George W. Bush, in order to woo Latino
voters to his party, has called for a guest-worker program that offers legal
status for illegal workers in the United States for over one year.
He said days earlier that he opposed the boycott but
insisted that the immigration reform must move forward. Enditem
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