Mexico Alert is for Border Cities Ellen Creager - Detroit Free Press go to original
| | About 100,000 teens and college students travel to Mexico during spring break yearly - most of them to resort areas far removed from the border, such as Cabo San Lucas, Puerto Vallarta, Cancun and Cozumel. | | | | A new US State Department travel alert for Mexico warns travelers to be vigilant because of escalating violence and drug cartel-related murders.
However, it does not urge students on spring break or anyone else to avoid Mexico entirely - only to avoid the U.S.-Mexico border region, especially Ciudad Juarez, a border town across from El Paso, Texas, that has seen 1,800 people killed since January 2008. The alert also warns against travel to Tijuana, Nogales, Nuevo Laredo, Monterrey and Matamoros.
It cautions that "Mexican and foreign bystanders have been injured or killed in violent attacks in cities across the country ... in recent years, dozens of U.S. citizens have been kidnapped across Mexico."
The alert recommends these common-sense precautions:
• Stay in tourist areas.
• Visit businesses and travel roads only in daylight hours.
• Avoid areas where there is prostitution or drug-dealing.
• Avoid displaying expensive jewelry, money or other valuables.
In response to the warning, the University of Arizona in Tucson urged its students to avoid visiting Mexico for spring break, but other universities did not. About 100,000 teens and college students travel to Mexico during spring break yearly - most of them to resort areas far removed from the border, such as Cabo San Lucas, Puerto Vallarta, Cancun and Cozumel. |