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The carcass of a coyote lies next to a 55-gallon water container left in the southern Arizona desert near the town of Arivaca. The humanitarian organization Humane Borders said the water station had been shot at.
The carcass of a coyote lies next to a 55-gallon water container left in the southern Arizona desert near the town of Arivaca. Humane Borders said shots had been fired at the water station. Photograph: Joel Smith/AP
The carcass of a coyote lies next to a 55-gallon water container left in the southern Arizona desert near the town of Arivaca. Humane Borders said shots had been fired at the water station. Photograph: Joel Smith/AP

Life-saving water stations for migrants vandalized in Arizona

This article is more than 8 years old
  • Six of eight water stations suffer vandalism, humanitarian group says
  • ‘This is a saving of human life. There’s no politics involved’

A humanitarian group in Arizona has said that six of its eight water stations for migrants crossing the Sonoran desert have been vandalized, including one that was shot at and had the carcass of a coyote next to it.

Humane Borders said the water stations help keep migrants who are crossing illegally from Mexico through the southern Arizona desert alive.

Joel Smith, director of operations, said he discovered that most of the water stations had been vandalized during a routine inspection on Tuesday.

He said he was most disturbed by one station east of the town of Arivaca that someone had shot at and left the carcass of a coyote next to, saying the vandalism was probably by someone opposed to leaving water for migrants crossing illegally.

“Whether you agree with international immigration or not, this is a saving of human life. There’s no politics involved. Either I’m gonna help people live or I’m gonna be discovering a whole lot of human bodies,” Smith said.

A sheriff’s department spokeswoman, Courtney Rodriguez, said the incident was reported on Tuesday and is under investigation.

But she said that investigating this type of vandalism is difficult because there is no way to know when it took place.

Humane Borders has had water stations in southern Arizona since 2000. The stations have been vandalized in the past, but it has never been as disturbing as what the organization discovered this week, Smith said. The water container that was shot at has been there since 2004.

The number of migrant deaths in the Sonoran desert has fallen in the past few years but remains an issue. The US border patrol reported 107 desert deaths in the Tucson Sector, which comprises most of Arizona, in fiscal year 2014. There were 307 total reported deaths by the border patrol the same year.

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