Arizona to remove shipping container wall on US border

Arizona to remove shipping container wall on US border

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Arizona to remove shipping container wall on US border

American and Mexican families play with a toy called “up and down” (seesaw swing) over the Mexican border with the US at the Anapra zone in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico on Sunday.


Arizona agreed Wednesday to dismantle a wall of shipping containers at the Mexican border that critics said was an expensive, ecologically damaging political stunt that did nothing to keep migrants out of the US. 

The state’s Republican Governor Doug Ducey spent $90 million of taxpayers’ money lining up rusting boxes in what he said was a bid to stem the flow of people crossing into the country.

The corrugated containers, which snake for 4 miles (7 kilometers) through federal lands like a huge stationary cargo train, divide an important conservation area that is home to a lot of vulnerable species, but which is so difficult to traverse that people traffickers routinely avoid it. 

Now Ducey, who leaves office early in 2023, will have to get rid of the 915 containers from the Coronado National Forest.

In an agreement reached Wednesday with the federal government, Ducey’s administration said it will “remove all previously installed shipping containers and associated equipment, materials, vehicles, and other objects from the United States’ properties on National Forest System lands.” 

From close up, the double-stacked container wall looks like the clumsy handiwork of a giant playing with building blocks.

Its presence is so jarring that, in addition to the federal court case, it was also the subject of two lawsuits by the Center for Biological Diversity, an environmental organization that has been active in the area for three decades.

“The biodiversity of this region is off the charts,” Russ McSpadden, a member of the organization, told AFP in a statement.

“It’s one of the most important conservation areas in the entire United States.”

Arizona shares around 370 miles of border with Mexico, including environmental preservation areas, national parks, military zones, and indigenous reservations.

Until the 2017 arrival in the White House of Donald Trump – who was propelled to power on his pledge to “Build That Wall” – there was very little in the way of a physical barrier separating it from Mexico.

Now vast stretches of the border have a fence that towers up to 9 meters high.