Cinco de Mayo cancelled in Philadelphia amid immigration fears
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Organizers of a prominent Mexican festival in Philadelphia have cancelled this year鈥檚 parade over concerns that immigration authorities could target attendees.
Edgar Ramirez, one of the six organizers who decided unanimously to cancel it, told local station WCAU-TV that the decision was a 鈥溾 one聽in light of聽the "severe conditions affecting the immigrant community,鈥 citing recent聽large-scale immigration raids that include a roundup of 248 people in Pennsylvania and neighboring states this month.
"We have people who travel all the way from Chicago, Connecticut and New York," Mr. Ramirez told the station. "We don't want anything to happen to them."
El Carnaval de Puebla, held in South Philadelphia for about a decade on May 5, celebrates Mexican forces鈥櫬燿efeat of French invaders on May 5, 1862 in Puebla, the state from which much of the city's Mexican population hails. About 450 people march in the parade, which draws about 15,000 attendees.
The event's cancellation seems to underscore the way a crackdown aimed at least nominally at immigrants without legal status has prompted trepidation among nonwhite ethnic communities more generally. And it comes as Philadelphia, along with other cities deemed 鈥渟anctuaries鈥 for immigrants due to policies that limit police cooperation with ICE, faces pressure from the Trump administration. In a January memo, President Trump ordered federal funding to be cut off for such jurisdictions, though if and how that might be enacted remains unclear.
Since 2014, Philadelphia while waiting for immigration agents to arrive, unless the individual is being released after conviction for a violent felony and the request is supported by a judicial warrant.
But the city is facing anti-sanctuary pressure from the state of Pennsylvania as well as from the federal government: in February, the Republican-controlled state Senate to cities and counties that do not honor ICE detention requests in any circumstances. Mayor Jim Kenney says he sees the state bill as more of a threat than Mr. Trump鈥檚 executive order, and calls Republicans鈥 characterization of it as a public-safety measure 鈥渕ystifying鈥.
鈥淎lmost every police chief across the country, the Police Chiefs Association, has said that imposing these types of situations is less safe by driving undocumented but good-meaning people underground, when they鈥檙e victims of it or witnesses to it,鈥 he told CBS after the bill鈥檚 passage.聽
ICE says its enforcement actions are targeted operations, not indiscriminate sweeps. But Philadelphia聽immigration lawyer David Kaplan told Philly.com that , although enforcement might not target the carnival itself.
"I don't think it's beyond [Immigration and Customs Enforcement] to put themselves in the right locations where people would stop to eat before going to the carnival,鈥 he told the site.
El Carnaval鈥檚 organizers say they will meet soon to discuss the future of the festival.
"I would understand why people are scared or worried," said Carlos Torres, a spokesman with the Mexican Consulate in Philadelphia, in an interview with聽WCAU-TV. "But our message is that we are with them. People should try to continue to live their lives as regular as possible, but in a well-informed matter."
This report includes material from the Associated Press.