Pubdate: Sat, 23 Nov 2002
Source: Rocky Mountain News (Denver, CO)
Copyright: 2002, Denver Publishing Co.
Contact:  http://www.rockymountainnews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/371
Author: Raul Llamas, Associated Press

MEXICO, U.S. LAWMAKERS MEET

States Along Border Discuss Violence, Rio Grande Water

NUEVO LAREDO, Mexico - Lawmakers from both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border 
met in this Mexican border city Friday to discuss the Rio Grande water 
fight, drug-related violence and other issues.

The third annual legislative border forum brought together 46 lawmakers 
from the 10 Mexican and U.S. states along the 2,000-mile international line 
stretching from the Pacific Ocean to the Gulf of Mexico.

 From the United States, eight legislators participated - three from New 
Mexico, two from California, two from Arizona and one from Texas.

In separate Binational Commission meetings Monday and Tuesday in Mexico 
City, high-ranking U.S. officials, including Secretary of State Colin 
Powell, will hold talks with their Mexican counterparts on a number of 
topics, including what to do about the 3 million Mexicans working illegally 
in the U.S.

The talks Friday focused on more regional concerns, such as the 
transportation delays caused by heightened security at border crossings.

Enrique Cardenas, president of the legislature in the Gulf state of 
Tamaulipas, which borders Texas, said border-crossers face hourlong waits, 
complicating life for many who cross daily to work or study.

Cardenas said while he understands the need for the security measures, "we 
believe that more personnel by the North Americans should be put into place 
to ease the flow of foot and automobile traffic."

Cardenas and others also expressed concern over violence plaguing the 
region. In the border's largest city, Ciudad Juarez, more than 75 women 
have been raped and killed since 1993. Dozens of suspects have been 
arrested, but bodies have continued to turn up in the desert.

Nuevo Laredo, across from Laredo, Texas, has witnessed more than 60 
executions in the past year, many of them drug-related.

The violence at times has spilled over into U.S. territory. In September, 
four Mexican women were gunned down with semiautomatic guns in Donna, a 
Texas border town of 15,000.

The group also planned to address the ensuing battle over Rio Grande water. 
The United States is demanding Mexico pay back nearly half a trillion 
gallons of Rio Grande water owed to south Texas farmers under a 1944 treaty.

Texas farmers claim the shortfall has cost them nearly a billion dollars in 
lost crops since 1992. Mexican officials say Mexico is on track to pay back 
the water over the next five years.
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