Pubdate: Sun, 23 Mar 2003 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 2003 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298 Author: Clifford Krauss U.S., CANADA AND MEXICO TIGHTEN SECURITY ALONG BORDERS Concerns About Commerce as Borders Tighten TORONTO, March 22 - Big commercial traffic jams subsided over the last two days after snarling United States border crossings with Canada and Mexico much of the week as security and law enforcement officers of the three countries raised their guard against possible terrorist infiltrators. Lines of southbound trucks full of Canadian auto parts, paper products and other merchandise began to grow Tuesday night to two hours - four times the normal average - at the Ambassador Bridge between Detroit and Windsor, the most crucial point in a trade relationship valued at $1.3 billion a day for both countries. Delays of up to five hours were reported at several other border points in Ontario and British Columbia earlier in the week. But Canadian and American customs agents and other law enforcement officials scrambled to alleviate the waits. Canada has agreed to step up random searches of vehicles by customs agents while the police have set up roadblocks on several feeder roads near the borders with New York and Michigan. Canadian officials said they had agreed to a request by Attorney General John Ashcroft to increase the number of Canadian Security Intelligence Service agents along the border. With the United States under an orange alert, Mexican officials also reported increased waiting times at the border with the United States, though nothing that seriously threatened the $250 billion a year in border trade. At several of the busiest points along the United States-Canadian border, officials on both sides have set up registration systems for individuals and companies that regularly cross the border to allow them faster clearance. In Cornwall, Ontario, a busy point along the St. Lawrence River bordering New York State, a Royal Canadian Mounted Police helicopter is crisscrossing the border watching for snowmobiles and cars crossing several border points and "ice bridges" across the river that are unguarded by customs officials or the police. Police patrols are stopping drivers for routine checks. With the river frozen there throughout the winter, the police report an increase in smuggling of illegal immigrants by local runners mostly belonging to the sprawling Akwesasne Mohawk reservation, on islands along the Ontario, Quebec and New York borders. Law enforcement officials have arrested more than 30 smugglers and illegal immigrants trying to cross into the United States this year, already surpassing the number of such arrests in the area for all of 2002. The Mounted Police helicopter that serves as the eyes of the water and road patrols can stay in the air longer because of a new agreement allowing it to refuel in New York State. Meanwhile, in recent months Canadian law enforcement has placed sensors on unguarded roads to monitor traffic and obtained warrants to place tracking devices on vehicles driven by suspected smugglers. Officials here said intelligence gathered and now shared on both sides of the border was leading to new major investigations of organized crime rings smuggling cigarettes, marijuana, illegal immigrants and cash that also could be exploited conceivably by terrorists. "We're not where we want to be but we're getting there," said Sgt. Gilles Tougas, the police supervisor here. "Contraband is down a bit and there are more arrests." Still, the 5,500-mile border with the United States is hard to defend: there are golf courses with tees on one side of the border and the greens on the other, and towns that straddle borders. "It's an undefended border," said Wesley Wark, a University of Toronto historian who studies security issues, "and it always will be." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D