2006年VOA标准英语-U.S. Officials Deal with Drug Smuggling at(在线收听) |
By Greg Flakus As VOA's Greg Flakus reports from the border in Hudspeth County, in far-west Texas, local officials are worried about the potential for violent clashes. ------------------------------------------------------ Hudspeth County's Chief Deputy Sheriff Mike Doyal was among the lawmen who came to the scene of a border drug smuggling operation on January 23.
"There was a military-style Humvee on the Mexican side,” said the deputy sheriff. “One of my first officers on the scene said it had been on this side with two subjects in it, one in the back with a heavy machine gun and one in the front with an assault-type weapon."
This vehicle became stuck while trying to cross the border That response provided little comfort to U.S. law enforcement officials like Mike Doyal. "We have always tried to enjoy a good, working cooperative relationship with Mexico and would like to see it continue, but ultimately when it comes to cleaning up what is on the south side of the Texas border, it is up to the Mexican government. We cannot do it for them," said Doyal. The incident on the river in Hudspeth County drew fire from the group that calls itself The Minutemen, and other groups calling for stricter control of the border. They cited over 200 other cases in which armed men, sometimes dressed in military uniforms, crossed over the border. Some incidents involved violence or threats against U.S. law officers. Mosier says efforts to tighten control of the border after the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks have resulted in more criminal gang violence directed at agents on patrol |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/2/31000.html |