US sues Arizona over immigration

THE US government has filed a lawsuit against Arizona for a controversial immigration law which has been sharply criticised by America’s neighbours and by the US administration.

The Justice Department said today it was challenging the new law in the courts because it hampered the authority of the administration of President Barack Obama to enforce national immigration policy.

It also placed significant “burdens” on federal agencies and law enforcement, the department argued.

Federal laws do not permit the development of a “patchwork of state and local immigration policies,” it said.

“Diverting federal resources away from dangerous aliens such as terrorism suspects and aliens with criminal records will impact the entire country’s safety,” US Attorney General Eric Holder said.

“Setting immigration policy and enforcing immigration laws is a national responsibility,” he said.

The Arizona law, due to take effect on July 29, makes it a crime to be in the state, which borders Mexico, without proper immigration papers and requires local police, who are not federal agents responsible for immigration matters, to determine if people are in the country legally.

US officials said they took the action after consulting with various law enforcement departments, chiefs of police, civil rights groups and other local officials.

Many said they were concerned the law would make victims of crimes or witnesses “less likely to contact or cooperate with law enforcement” if they did not possess proper legal papers.

Officials in Arizona argue they have been overrun by illegal immigrants leading to a spike in the crime rate and straining state resources. They say the measure was necessary only because of lax federal government enforcement of the southern US border.

Meanwhile, Arizona’s two US senators issued a joint statement slamming the lawsuit.

“The American people must wonder whether the Obama administration is really committed to securing the border when it sues a state that is simply trying to protect its people by enforcing immigration law,” Republicans John McCain and Jon Kyl said.

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