Pubdate: Fri, 03 Dec 1999 Source: Las Cruces Sun-News (NM) Copyright: 1999 by Mid-States Newspapers Inc. Contact: 256 W. Las Cruces Ave., Las Cruces, N.M. 88004 Fax: 505-541-5498 Feedback: http://www.newschoice.com/asp-bin/feedback.asp?GPCMidCru&ES5.07 Website: http://www.newschoice.com/Newspapers/MidStates/LasCruces/ U.S.-MEXICO LINKS EXIST ON MANY LEVELS The relations between the United States and Mexico don't all involve crime. It just seems that way lately. One of the biggest international stories at the moment is the discovery of graves on ranches near Juarez of people who were likely killed in the drug war. That will remain a big story for some time to come as more bodies are found, including, it is suspected, some Americans. Leaders of drug cartels have warred for several years for control of the drug trade in Juarez, described by the Associated Press as the world's most lucrative drug corridor into the United States. Tourism from the U.S. into Juarez has been hurt by news of shootings and killings in downtown bars and restaurants and on the streets of the Mexican city. Juarez has all the more reason to worry about declining tourism now that the digging for bodies of drug war victims is under way with the FBI and Mexican agents cooperating in the search. The dangerous reputation of Juarez is only added to by the fact that Investigations are still ongoing into rapes and murders of as many as a couple of hundred young Mexican women, often those who work for the factories known as maquiladores along the international border between Juarez and El Paso, Texas. As if that were not enough, the Mexican government itself is harming tourism with a new law that went into effect at the border on Wednesday. Now car owners headed from the U.S. into Mexico must provide a vehicle deposit of $400 to $800. Cash or credit cards can be used for the deposit, which already is a highly unpopular imposition on Americans driving into Mexico. U.S. Rep. Silvestre Reyes, R-Texas, who is a resident of El Paso, is asking President Clinton to bring up the deposit issue when he meets next week with the Mexican President Ernesto Zedillo, according to a Los Angeles Times report. But, relations with Mexico exist on different levels, and away from the problems with crime and poor decisions on tourist policies by the Mexican government, people in both countries still get along and work on joint ports of entry and economic development such as Santa Teresa, N.M., and San Jeronimo, Chihuahua, Mexico; on livestock imports and exports; at New Mexico's trade offices in Chihuahua and in Mexico City; and on excellent official sister city relationships such as those between Las Cruces and Lerdo, Mexico, and a new one between Mesilla and Ascencion, Mexico. Far after the stories fade about bodies and drug wars and unpopular new tourist fees, it will be the foundations laid by the citizens of the United States with their neighboring citizens in Mexico that will do the most to improve relations between the two countries. After all, the vast majority of the residents along both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border are hard-working, decent citizens who get along just great together. Let's keep it that way. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake