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Qlho Body camera footage released of response to California rail yard shooting
Around 3,000 migrants set out Sunday on what they call a mass protest procession through southern Mexico to demand the end of detention centers like the one that caught fire last month, killing 40 migrants.The migrants started from the city of Tapachula, near the Guatemalan border. They say their aim is to reach Mexico City to demand ch <a href=https://www.stanley-quencher.uk>stanley cup</a> anges in the way migrants are treated. It could well have been any of us,  Salvadoran migrant Miriam Argueta said of those killed in the fire.  In fact, a lot of our countrymen died. The only th <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.es>botella stanley</a> ing we are asking for is justice, and to be treated like anyone el <a href=https://www.stanleywebsite.us>stanley bottles</a> se. But in the past many participants in such processions have continued on to theU.S. border,which is almost always their goal. The migrants are mainly from Central America, Cuba, Venezuela, Ecuador and Colombia.Mexican authorities have used paperwork restrictions and highway checkpoints to bottle up tens of thousands of frustrated migrants in Tapachula, making it hard for them to travel to the U.S. border.Argueta said that when migrants look for work in Tapachula,  they give us jobs, perhaps not humiliating, but the one the Mexicans don t want to do, hard work that pays very little. Organizer Irineo M煤jica said the migrants are demanding the dissolving of the country s immigration agency, whose officials have been blamed 鈥?and some charged with homicide 鈥?in the March 27 fire. M煤jica called the immigration detention centers  jails. SEE MORE: Mexico migrant camp tents torched across borde Zvqr Alarm over shelter conditions as 5-year-old migrant dies in Chicago
4-H programs across the country are known for their youth development progr <a href=https://www.stanleycups.com.mx>stanley tazas</a> ams. Now, students in 4-H are taking their civic engagement to the next level by helping others amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Weve got partnerships with UC Davis and San Francisco medical centers where were getting sterile wrap and then young people are r <a href=https://www.stanleycup.com.se>stanley cup</a> ecycling that material and making masks for front-line workers, for agriculture laborers, for people working in restaurants,  says Lynn Schmitt-McQuitty, California s 4-H Director. She says groups across the state are making masks and shields for ess <a href=https://www.stanley-cups-uk.uk>stanley quencher</a> ential workers and people who need them.In Sonoma County, several 4-H families spent their time in quarantine putting several 3-D printers to good use. We decided to start printing face shields. We printed a few different designs and used the transparency overhead and members of our community joined us. Together we printed over 1,000 face shields and 2,000 neck straps which are the straps that keep the masks off the ears of essential workers,  says Jametha Cosgrove of Golden Hills 4-H. The protective gear went to their local essential workers and even nurses and doctors across the state who needed them.Santa Clara County 4-H ambassador Joey Jacoby put together mask-making kits and is distributing cloth masks to the community as part of his service learning project. The masks are just clean, fresh, cotton material so 100% cotton masks,  says Jacoby. Jacoby blew away his original goal of 350 masks with the help
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