Pubdate: Sat, 21 Apr 2007 Source: Dallas Morning News (TX) Copyright: 2007 The Dallas Morning News Contact: http://www.dallasnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/117 Author: Alfredo Corchado, The Dallas Morning News Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Mexico (Mexico) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Felipe+Calderon MEXICO TRAVEL ADVISORY ISSUED Drug-Related Deaths Prompt U.S. Warning; Border States Included MONTERREY, Mexico - The U.S. State Department warned Americans this week of drug violence in several parts of Mexico, including states along the Texas border. The travel advisory comes as emboldened traffickers have posted written death threats against government officials and their families - attaching them with ice picks to the bodies of murder victims, U.S. and Mexican officials said. In the past month, at least three bodies have been found in the Monterrey area with messages accusing Nuevo Lesn state authorities of favoring rival cartel groups and warning of reprisals against them and their families, authorities said. "This won't end until you understand," one note said. "The environment has never been this tense," said a U.S. State Department official, speaking on condition of anonymity. "We've never seen our counterparts as worried about their personal safety as they are today." "We're all walking on eggshells," said a Nuevo Lesn state official, "hoping that the messages they're leaving behind aren't directed at us." Direct threats against government officials and their families are unusual in Mexico, authorities say. While confirming the threats, the Mexican official reiterated President Felipe Caldersn's vow to crack down on drug traffickers, whose turf battles so far this year have claimed the lives of more than 700 people nationwide. Last year, more than 2,000 people were killed. Mr. Caldesn, who recently disclosed that he too had received death threats, said: "I want to reiterate that we will not only persevere in our cause, but the more violence we face from those who criminalize our youth, the more energetic the response will be from the government." Two of the states listed in the State Department's travel advisory border Texas: Nuevo Lesn, "especially in and around Monterrey," and Tamaulipas, "particularly Nuevo Laredo." The travel advisory also includes the popular beach city of Acapulco. While much of the violence is between rival cartels battling over control of drug routes into the United States and for new emerging drug markets in Mexico, the U.S. government warned that foreigners also faced risks. "U.S. citizens should make every attempt to travel on main roads during daylight hours," the State Department said in the announcement, which replaces one issued in January. The U.S. ambassador to Mexico, Tony Garza, added: "We ask U.S. citizens to exercise all due caution while in Mexico and remain vigilant for any situation that could become dangerous." U.S. officials also expressed concern for American citizens and investments in Mexico, particularly in the northern region, which has been hit hard by drug violence this year. As many as 50,000 Americans live in the Monterrey area, and 1,200 U.S. businesses have investments there, representing about half the region's $14.4 billion in foreign investment, U.S. officials say. That makes the situation "a great national security concern for us," the U.S. official said. Alejandro Paez y Aragsn, secretary of economic development for Nuevo Lesn, said in an interview that foreign investment in the state continues unabated, but acknowledged: "Foreign companies, particularly American firms, are increasingly raising concerns about the security situation in our state. That is a big concern for all of us." The killings continued across Mexico this week, including 22 deaths reported Monday. In the northern city of Hermosillo, Sonora, an unknown assailant tossed a grenade into the offices of Cambio newspaper, breaking windows but not causing any injuries. The attack came a day after gunmen kidnapped a reporter, Saul Noe Martmnez Ortega, who had been investigating drug violence for the Diario de Agua Prieta newspaper, also in Sonora. Since 2000, at least 33 journalists have been slain or disappeared in Mexico, making it one of the most dangerous countries for journalists. Officials on both sides of the border warned that violence in Mexico will continue to surge as the demand for drugs within Mexico grows. Traditionally, Mexican traffickers refrained from selling drugs to Mexican youths, preferring to focus on U.S. drug demand. But Mr. Caldersn said drug traffickers are today solely focused on profits. He said the country has nearly 1 million Mexicans drug addicts, adding that many become addicts by the age of 12. "That's why they're pushing them into drugs, so that they can make them slaves to their addictions and force them to buy their drugs," he said. "This is all part of the drug traffickers' diabolical plan," Josi Santiago Vasconcelos, deputy attorney general for international affairs, said in an interview. "We're talking about a nightmare for our children, and when I say children I mean that in the broader sense, U.S. and Mexican children. Only when we start talking about our children as being both U.S. and Mexican, only then will we alter the battle against traffickers." Few cities across Mexico represent a more attractive market for drug traffickers than Monterrey, where the Sinaloa and Gulf cartels are waging war. The city is prosperous and close to the Texas border. The suburb of San Pedro Garcma Garza has the highest per capital income in Latin America. Nuevo Lesn's police forces, which have boasted as being among the most professional and cleanest in the country, got a black eye this week when Mexican troops swept into several cities in the Monterrey area and detained more than 133 police officers for investigation of possible ties with drug gangs. At a police station in suburban San Nicolas, just as roll call ended Thursday, a police officer took out his gun and shot two of his colleagues and then himself. One of the officers died and the other was in critical condition. The shooter, Gabriel Rangel Caldersn, died at the scene. He left behind a suicide note, but authorities did not disclose what it said. Americans Warned The State Department is warning Americans traveling in Mexico of drug-related violence in the states of Tamaulipas and Nuevo Lesn, both bordering Texas, and in Michoacan, Baja California Norte and Guerrero. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake