Mexican Way Stations Mark Trail of Illegal Immigraion to US

ALTAR, SONORA - JUNE 06: A man visits a shrine where many immigrants stop to pray on the dirt toll road that leads to the border on June 6, 2006 near Altar Mexico, 60 miles south of the border village of Sasabe. More illegal immigrants pass through Altar where immigrant smuggling is the primary industry, than any other town. Available services include "coyotes" or guides, transportation over 60 miles or more of dirt road in vans carrying as many as 25 people, about 150 "hospedajes" or guest houses, provisions, a free mobile clinic catering mostly to people who were hurt trying to cross the border, and groups who warn immigrants on the dangers of the trek and help those in need. From here, most immigrants are guided through Sasabe, where nightly robberies have become an industry and rape is common, then across the US-Mexico border to walk for about 45 miles through the desert before being picked up by smuggler vehicles. It is during the walk that most of the 473 deaths of 2005 occurred, mostly from exposure to extreme heat and fatigue. (Photo by David McNew/Getty Images)
ALTAR, SONORA - JUNE 06: A man visits a shrine where many immigrants stop to pray on the dirt toll road that leads to the border on June 6, 2006 near Altar Mexico, 60 miles south of the border village of Sasabe. More illegal immigrants pass through Altar where immigrant smuggling is the primary industry, than any other town. Available services include "coyotes" or guides, transportation over 60 miles or more of dirt road in vans carrying as many as 25 people, about 150 "hospedajes" or guest houses, provisions, a free mobile clinic catering mostly to people who were hurt trying to cross the border, and groups who warn immigrants on the dangers of the trek and help those in need. From here, most immigrants are guided through Sasabe, where nightly robberies have become an industry and rape is common, then across the US-Mexico border to walk for about 45 miles through the desert before being picked up by smuggler vehicles. It is during the walk that most of the 473 deaths of 2005 occurred, mostly from exposure to extreme heat and fatigue. (Photo by David McNew/Getty Images)
Mexican Way Stations Mark Trail of Illegal Immigraion to US
ACQUISTA UNA LICENZA
Come posso utilizzare questa immagine?
475,00 €
EUR

DETTAGLI

Restrizioni:
Contatta l'ufficio locale per informazioni su qualsiasi tipo di uso commerciale o promozionale. Diritti editoriali illimitati per Regno Unito, Stati Uniti, Irlanda, Canada (escluso Quebec). Diritti editoriali limitati per i quotidiani di altri Paesi. Chiama per informazioni.
Attestazione:
David McNew / Staff
N. Editorial:
71166874
Collezione:
Getty Images News
Data di creazione:
6 giugno 2006
Data di upload:
Tipo di licenza:
Info sulla liberatoria:
Senza liberatoria. Ulteriori informazioni
Fonte:
Getty Images North America
Nome oggetto:
71111165DM009_Mexican_Way_S
Max. dimensione file:
3000 x 2000 px (25,40 x 16,93 cm) - 300 dpi - 1 MB