Travel Warning

United States Department of State
Bureau of Consular Affairs
Washington, DC 20520

This information is current as of today, Sun May 09 09:34:01 2010.

MEXICO

May 06, 2010

The Department of State has issued this Travel Warning to inform U.S. citizens traveling to and living in Mexico about the security situation in Mexico, and to advise that the authorized departure of family members of U.S. government personnel from U.S. Consulates in the northern Mexico border cities of Tijuana, Nogales, Ciudad Juarez, Nuevo Laredo, Monterrey and Matamoros has been extended.  This Travel Warning supersedes the Travel Warning for Mexico dated April 12, 2010 to note the extension of authorized departure and to update guidance on security conditions and crime.  

Millions of U.S. citizens safely visit Mexico each year.  This includes tens of thousands who cross the border every day for study, tourism or business and at least one million U.S. citizens who live in Mexico.  The Mexican government makes a considerable effort to protect U.S. citizens and other visitors to major tourist destinations.   Resort areas and tourist destinations in Mexico do not see the levels of drug-related violence and crime reported in the border region and in areas along major drug trafficking routes.  Nevertheless, crime and violence are serious problems.  While most victims of violence are Mexican citizens associated with criminal activity, the security situation poses serious risks for U.S. citizens as well.   

It is imperative that U.S. citizens understand the risks involved in travel to Mexico, how best to avoid dangerous situations, and who to contact if one becomes a victim of crime or violence.  Common-sense precautions such as visiting only legitimate business and tourist areas during daylight hours, and avoiding areas where criminal activity might occur, can help ensure that travel to Mexico is safe and enjoyable.  U.S. citizen victims of crime in Mexico are urged to contact the consular section of the nearest U.S. Consulate or Embassy for advice and assistance. Contact information is provided at the end of this message.

More details at the United States Department of State web site. 

Today’s Los Angeles Times has a front page article assuring everyone that it really is safe to travel to Tijuana.  They do have a travel section that takes considerable advertising from agencies promoting travel to Mexico.  Could that be their motivation?

Sending Illegal Aliens Home

The Arizona legislature sent the Republican governor, Jan Brewer, legislation making it a crime under state law to be in the country illegally.  She signed the law today.  It also requires local police officers to question people about their immigration status if there is reason to suspect they are illegal immigrants; allows lawsuits against government agencies that hinder enforcement of immigration laws; and makes it illegal to hire illegal immigrants for day labor or knowingly transport them.  Sanctuary cities are outlawed in the legislation.

Three problems immediately come to mind.

1. Illegal aliens living in Arizona will not call the police after a burglary or other criminal offense because they will fear being arrested.  Special Order 40 in Los Angeles was issued specifically to stop police from arresting suspected illegal aliens when dealing with crime issues.

2. This law could result in everyone wearing an arm band to identify their status similar to Nazi Germany banding Jews and other “undesirables”.

3. There will be racial profiling.  Anyone with a Hispanic/Latino surname, physical characteristics common to Mexicans, or an accent will be stopped and questioned.

I have to respect those Arizonans for having the courage of their convictions.  Has anyone seen this data regarding crime in Arizona that was compiled by someone in Michigan?  When the car washes have no employees and the care givers have all left will they still demand the imposition of this law?  If the law conforms to all Federal law it will not be overturned.

Despite the down sides, forcing illegal aliens back to their home countries is a good thing.  Most illegal aliens probably won’t go back to their native countries.  My question is how do you identify illegal aliens from Canada, eh? 

The Republican Party will pay a price for this law.

Here are two links that are worthy of considering from the Arizona Republic and from Freewheel Burning.

Tragic Followup to An American Murdered in Mexico

The leading investigator in the killing of Bobby Salcedo was slain in Mexico.  This story was reported on Los Angeles local news and in the Los Angeles Times.

The paper reported that investigator Manuel Acosta had been killed in an ambush while conducting his investigation.  Apparently very little progress had been made in his efforts.  Acosta was ambushed by gunmen in a five-seat red pickup truck, the kind frequently used by drug traffickers. He was hit as he returned to his office from another deadly crime scene.

The original story was reported here on January 4, 2010.

An American Murdered in Mexico

An assistant principal and school board member from the community of El Monte in the Los Angeles area was visiting his wife’s hometown.  While out to dinner with friends he, along with five others, was kidnapped and murdered.  The full story below was reported by the Los Angeles Times.

MEXICO UNDER SIEGE 

Wife of slain El Monte civic leader tells how night out with friends morphed into horror

‘You never think this kind of thing can happen . . . to innocent people,’ Betzy Salcedo says.

By Tracy Wilkinson, January 3, 2010, Reporting from Gomez Palacio, Mexico –   They were aware of the dangers. Agustin Roberto “Bobby” Salcedo and his wife, Betzy, knew that this town, like much of Mexico, was no longer the tranquil spot it had been.

“I’ve been coming regularly,” Salcedo’s widow said Saturday of her hometown. “We knew how bad it had become.”

And yet, the Salcedos ventured out for a few beers the night before New Year’s Eve.

“We were just going out with a group of friends,” Betzy Salcedo said, speaking slowly and casting her eyes downward. “You are careful, you look around, but you never think this kind of thing can happen . . . to innocent people. We were having a good time. Then we were in the mouth of the wolf.”

Hours later, Bobby Salcedo was dead, hauled away from the bar with five other men, their bodies dumped in a dried-grass field on the outskirts of town.

Arrangements were being made Saturday to repatriate Salcedo’s body. The 33-year-old, who was born and raised in the Los Angeles area, was an assistant principal and school board member in El Monte.

His slaying underscores the random volatility of the violence in Mexico and the ease with which the pain it causes can seep past the country’s borders.

The Salcedos might also have been lulled into a false sense of security by outdated memories and the comfort of old friends.

Betzy Salcedo cited an old Mexican saying: He who doesn’t owe anything has nothing to fear. She always figured that people who had nothing to do with drug trafficking would not be targets in the country they loved.

One can follow the gruesome news out of Mexico, much of it involving the government’s ongoing war against powerful drug cartels, yet still feel a sense of immunity — that “it can’t happen to me,” that the dangers are remote. It is a common thought among many Mexicans, a defense mechanism, perhaps.

But now Betzy Salcedo and her family are bitter. Mexico has become a poison to them.

The Salcedos and their companions had ended up at the Iguanas Ranas bar on Miguel Aleman Boulevard in Gomez Palacio on Wednesday night.

By day and to the uninitiated, the strip may seem harmless enough. There are dives with names like Mens Club-Boomerang, but also taco stands and convenience stores. The Iguanas Ranas is painted almost whimsically with, as its name suggests, bright yellow and green frogs and iguanas.

At night, however, the environment shifts. “We don’t even go out at night anymore. We are exposed to everything,” said Gerardo Gonzalez, the bar’s accountant.

Routinely, he said, gunmen commandeer cars from passing motorists, demand bribes, enter bars to lord over the patrons. “We are living in times of terrible, daily crime,” said the lifelong Gomez Palacio resident, whose nephew was kidnapped and shot to death on Christmas Eve.

It didn’t used to be like this. Until about two years ago, the Iguanas Ranas admitted families — parents with their children. But then the violence started. About that time, several men were kidnapped from the place and killed.

This year the bar has endured a bomb threat, an extortion threat and robbery. Things have gotten so rough that the owner is considering shutting it down, Gonzalez said.

Betzy Salcedo, 26, remembers the days of her youth, when she and friends could go out at any time of day or night without thinking twice. “That’s all completely gone,” she said.

Bobby Salcedo’s brother Juan, a banker in the Los Angeles area, added: “I’ve read all the stories. Sixteen bodies found here, bodies there. But I always thought it was [happening to] bad people. You mind your own business and you’ll be fine.”

Gomez Palacio is an industrial city in the northern part of Durango, one of the deadliest states in Mexico last year as two drug gangs battled for territory. That battle is part of the nationwide fight involving drug traffickers and the government that has claimed more than 15,000 lives in three years.

In December federal police intercepted a shipment of more than 400 pounds of crystal meth, a few days after intercepting a similar amount of cocaine, both being transported through Gomez Palacio toward the U.S. border.

Police stations in Durango state came under grenade attack Dec. 14. The former mayor of Gomez Palacio was kidnapped Dec. 6 (and eventually released) and the local police chief, Roberto de Jesus Torres, was gunned down the evening of Dec. 2 as he left his home.

On New Year’s Eve, a few hours after Salcedo’s body was found, two detectives were kidnapped in the middle of the day. Their bodies were left in the bed of a pickup on a major highway on the outskirts of Gomez Palacio.

Investigators reported no new developments in the Salcedo case Saturday. They repeated that they were looking into whether any of the people killed with Salcedo had criminal ties, but had found none.

Betzy Salcedo said none of her group was involved in drug trafficking; the victims included one of her oldest friends, Luis Fernando Santillan Hernandez, 27, a lawyer, and his two younger brothers. Another victim, Javier Gerardo Garcia Camargo, 28, was married to her best friend.

Gunmen armed with rifles burst into the bar about 2 a.m. Thursday; there were conflicting accounts of what they were looking for, investigators said Saturday. Some witnesses said the men asked for the owner of a truck parked outside. Others said they demanded to know who was a cop.

The patrons were forced to the floor and ordered not to look as the gunmen hauled off Salcedo and the five others, who had been crowded around a pool table. They were shot to death and the bodies dumped along a canal in a poor neighborhood called September 11.

Although there were calls in the Los Angeles area to solve Salcedo’s killing and bring the guilty to justice, the norm in Mexico is impunity. Most crimes go unresolved.

Manuel Acosta, the lead investigator with the state prosecutor’s office, vowed in an interview Saturday to get to the bottom of the Salcedo slaying. Sometime next week, he said, investigators will begin pulling together testimony from various witnesses.

Betzy Salcedo said she hoped some good would come out of “all these horrors” — that a serious investigation would be launched and “this will not keep happening to innocent people.”

wilkinson@latimes.com

//

Copyright © 2010, The Los Angeles Times

January 5, 2010

A Leisure Guy comments about Mexico being the failed state on our border.  He says “We know how to stop this: legalize the drugs and institute a broad array of treatment programs (which would cost much less than the hopeless ‘War on Drugs.’ “  I couldn’t agree more.  Unfortunately there are too many people in the U.S. who will block these kinds of needed changes.

Saying No to Mexican Violence

I have been continuing to comment about the violent situation in Mexico.  I do so because many people are still vacationing or day tripping into that country.  It’s just not safe. 

While crime is low in El Paso the killing in Juarez, just across the river is the worst of any city in Mexico.  Reports are on the internet, CNN and in the newspapers.  The Auto Club of Southern California has always promoted cruises down the coast from California cities.  They no longer offer those trips in their Westways magazine.  Their latest issue has not one single reference to anything in Mexico and that includes advertising.

The U.S. State Department has put Mexico on its travel alert list.  I have commented about this before and hope that everyone will take this situation seriously.

American concern should be the possibility of terrorists and drug smugglers bringing violence across the border.  Those opposed to walls fences and other U.S. government efforts to stop illicit traffic into this country should look at the case of the Nigerian who almost brought down a commercial airplane near Detroit.

Is Mexico a Failing State?

This is not news.  Mexico is becoming a failed state.  Just Google these words “Mexico is a failed state” and you will see at least eight articles on the subject.   

Wikipedia says the term failed state is often used by political commentators and journalists to describe a state perceived as having failed at some of the basic conditions and responsibilities of a sovereign government. In order to make this definition more precise, the following attributes, proposed by the Fund for Peace, are often used to characterize a failed state:

  • loss of physical control of its territory, or of the monopoly on the legitimate use of physical force therein,
  • erosion of legitimate authority to make collective decisions,
  • an inability to provide reasonable public services, and
  • an inability to interact with other states as a full member of the international community.

Common characteristics of a failing state include a central government so weak or ineffective that it has little practical control over much of its territory; non-provision of public services; widespread corruption and criminality; refugees and involuntary movement of populations; and sharp economic decline.

The level of government control required to avoid being considered a failed state varies considerably amongst authorities. Furthermore, the declaration that a state has “failed” is generally controversial and, when made authoritatively, may carry significant geopolitical consequences.

The Associated Press reported a “Gunmen killed a state congressional candidate and his wife and two sons in their home Saturday in the Gulf coast state of Tabasco, in southern Mexico.” Gangs are the suspected killers.

It’s happening all over Mexico.  Is Mexico a failed state now?  That depends on your definition.  The United States government needs to be more concerned about its southern neighbor and the impact on our own nation.  Mexico could become a haven for terrorists that could bring significant harm to Americans.

Mexico is Not Safe to Visit

I have no personal vendetta against Mexico.  I took a 10 day vacation there in 1967.  The trip included a few days in Mexico City, a night in Taxco, and another few days in Acapulco.  It was a lot of fun.  I have been to Tijuana many times.  There was never an issue about my safety or others with me.  Things have changed in that country.  The unending reports about attacks on Mexican citizens and visitors to Mexico have convinced me that travel there is not safe.  It is not safe for the citizens of Mexico either. A Mennonite community in Chihuahua that dates to the 1920s is the latest in a series of continuing attack victims conducted by drug cartels.  The U.S. government has issued warnings.  They should be heeded.

A Fourth World Nation at America’s Door


Forty five years ago I went on a tour of Mexico City, Taxco, and Acapulco.  I had a wonderful time.  All three places were filled with interesting things to see and taste.  An acquaintance from Mexico City says those days are gone now.  It’s not safe to visit there anymore.  The killing of a French tourist at the airport confirms her words.  

 

A favorite place for sightseeing, when visiting San Diego, was Tijuana, MexicoSan Diego has a wonderful light rail trolley system that includes a ride to the Mexican border.  You can board the trolley at the Old Town station and ride to the border gate for $2.50.  It’s a bargain when you consider there is free parking at the Old Town station.  At the border you walk over the boulevard on a pedestrian ramp, through a revolving metal gate and you are in Mexico.  An easy 10 minute walk takes you to the main street of Tijuana.  We don’t go there now.  Many friends have also stopped visiting.

 

The Los Angeles Times has had too many stories of people being held up, kidnapped, and murdered in Mexico.  The perpetrators are gangs.  It is not just Tijuana, it is all of Mexico.  A couple from Southern California liked motor homing to Rosarito Beach and San Felipe on the Gulf of California.  After being held captive and being beaten they finally obtained their release.  They have told their story on Los Angeles television.  Check tours to Mexico and you will find there are none to Mexico City because the crime against tourists is too high.

 

 

 

Here is a quotation from the U.S, State Department about crime in Mexico

 CRIME: Crime in Mexico continues at high levels, and it is often violent, especially in Mexico City, Tijuana, Ciudad Juarez, Nuevo Laredo, Monterrey, Acapulco, and the state of Sinaloa.  Other metropolitan areas have lower, but still serious, levels of crime.  Low apprehension and conviction rates of criminals contribute to Mexico’s high crime rate.  U.S. citizen victims of crime in Mexico are encouraged to report the incident to the nearest police headquarters and to the nearest U.S. consular office.”

How different is Mexico from Somalia where the United States failed to bring any kind of peace?  Remember “Blackhawk Down?” Somalia has no organized governmentMexico does.  Somalia is the home of pirates that attack on both land and sea.  Mexico has drug cartels that kill each other and anyone else who gets in their way.  As reported in the Los Angeles Times the U.S. Joint Forces Command recommended that Mexico be monitored alongside Pakistan as a “weak and failing” state that could crumble swiftly under relentless assault by violent drug cartels.

February 3, 2009

The latest news is the unfortunate killing of three people outside of Cancun, Mexico.

 

 

Why are most Mexicans in Mexico so poor?

The fonts on this posting were revised on November 23, 2008 to enable easier reading.  The words and text were not revised.

 

“Why is Mexico so poor?” is the common search question.

The Los Angeles Daily News reporting on President Felipe Calderon of Mexico on Sunday, September 3, 2007,  “Criticizing the United States for its treatment of illegal Mexican immigrants has become routine for most Mexican politicians, including Calderon. Because the immigrants send home about $20 billion a year and because the yearly emigration of more than 400,000 people from Mexico relieves that country of masses of the poor, the government in Mexico City has little incentive either to stem the emigration northward or to support stricter measures making it harder for Mexicans to cross the border.”

 So I wondered why are most Mexicans in Mexico so poor?  I looked at Wikipedia ,ask.com and Google.  The answers I found were very limited.  Those that I found echoed my suspicions.  The web sites are http://www.funqa.com/economics/4400-1-Economics.html

 

http://www.city-data.com/forum/illegal-immigration/134888-why-mexican-economy-so-poor-their.html

 

http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20081107091500AAt44RQ

 

http://www.mindfully.org/WTO/2003/Mexico-Poor-NAFTA22mar03.htm

Additional web sites located June 13, 2012

http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20110611210236AAtOGz1

http://www.knowswhy.com/why-is-mexico-so-poor/

 

The message from all of these web sites is clear.  The wealthy of Mexico have the power to keep most of the country’s population very poor and they like it that way.  It’s all about cheap labor.  Their attitude is if the poor don’t like it they can sneak into the U.S.A.  They have gotten away with this because too many American companies like the cheap labor force and the American government is complicit in this situation.  It’s not a Democrat or Republican thing.  It is a U.S. government thing.

                              

The American public uproar is the best thing Mexicans have going for them to change the Mexican government.  So President Calderon’s statements are just part of that government’s public stance to convince Mexicans that their government really is concerned about the well being of its population.  As to the marches in the U.S. about illegal alien rights, those are the words and actions of do-gooders who have played into the hands of the wealthy Mexicans.

 

A very inadequate educational system and major government corruption are the two issues most commonly identified as destroying the Mexican economy.  Many Mexicans can not read or write.  Bribery is a way of life in almost every part of the government including the police.  These two problems discourage foreign investment.

 

Notice that Carlos Slim, the wealthiest man in Mexico, is now listed as the third wealthiest man in the world according to Forbes magazine.  He along with other wealthy Mexicans couldn’t be happier with this situation.  Carlos Slim alone is reported to control 20% of the Mexican economy.  Can you imagine what would happen to Mexico if the wealthiest in that nation were forced to surrender and share what they have with the average Mexican?  I am not a communist but I believe that the wealthy families of Mexico are one significant cause of that country’s problems.  The U.S. could force this situation to change.  The U.S. won’t do that because the situation benefits American corporations.