Your Experts on the East Cape of Baja

 

 

Mexico is dangerous….if you work for the Cartel!   

     Looking at the statistics, most of homicides in the Mexican border areas have been drug cartel related. Mexico has a murder rate of about 17 per 100,000 nationwide. Although that is about three times that of the U.S., it doesn't even rank among dangerous nations, such as the murder leader El Salvador with 71 per 100,000. If you remove the homicide victims that are directly related to the cartel activities the murder rate in Mexico is just slightly higher than that of the U.S.

 

Warning

    The recent Mexico travel “warning” was issued based on one event in Ciudad Juarez where there has been a history of drug related violence. CD Juarez has been a violent border city dating back more than 100 years. The violence in CD Juarez has escalated to more than 2500 murders in 2010. 2009 set records for the number of homicides in CD Juarez with over 2400 and 2010 is on track to be very close to those numbers.

 

Avoid Miami because of the violence in New Orleans

    New Orleans is the most deadly city in the U.S. with 64 murders per 100,000 population. Would you not visit Miami because of the violence in New Orleans? Sounds absurd no? Cabo San Lucas is about the same distance from the Mexican violence centers are Miami is from New Orleans.

Mind you, CD Juarez is almost 3 times more dangerous than New Orleans, with a stunning 171 murders per 100,000 population. Mexicans have know for a long time that Juarez is NOT a tourist destination. Don't make it yours and you will enjoy a delightful trip to many other locations in Mexico.

 

Baja California Sur - One of the safest destinations

The state of Baja California Sur is one of the safest states in Mexico and was specifically omitted from the Travel Warning issued by the Department of Homeland Security. BajaInsider.com is not saying there are not problems. There are crimes in Mexico and even Baja, but the crime rate has dropped in northern Baja and Baja Sur has seen very little serious crimes.

 

Conclusion

Travel safely, use your head and enjoy the warmth of the Baja sun and the people of this amazing peninsula. As the real numbers show, the odds of a successful and pleasant stay in Baja are overwhelming in your favor.

The copy above was adapted from 2011 Baja Insider.com.

 

 

 

Is it safe to travel to Mexico? Judging from the numbers, many are saying 'Yes'



 

 

By Paolo Carosso
Despite tales of drug violence, visitation to Mexico was up almost 19% over last year, as of September. And with 22.6 million tourists expected by year's end, numbers will about equal the record-breaking totals in 2008. About 80% of visitors are North American.

 

 

In fact, slightly more foreigners are vacationing in Mexico now than before the drug wars, which have killed about 30,000 (mostly drug traffickers) in the past four years, The Economist reported in November. Mexico now ranks No. 10 in international arrivals worldwide.

I'm just back from San Miguel de Allende, a gorgeous colonial city in central Mexico (read about it Friday at usatoday.com/travel), where, not surprisingly, more than one conversation during my visit turned toward security concerns.

But not the sort of concerns you might think. The Americans I spoke with there were worried about the bum rap they believe the entire country is getting due to drug violence that , for the most part, is concentrated hundreds of miles away near the U.S. border.

"There is very little crime here, and what there is doesn't affect gringos," said Irina Posner, a retired CBS News employee and one of an estimated 12,000 to 14,000 ex-pats who live full or part-time in San Miguel. " We love this town. We feelsafe in this town."

So did I, covering miles of narrow, cobbled walkways solo by day and by night in the 17th-century city. I felt as secure as I do in my own neighborhood, yet some innkeepers say they've had cancellations due to safety concerns.

Americans are notoriously near-sighted when it comes to geographical perspective. It's an issue Mexico's new tourism secretary Gloria Guevara addressed in an on-line seminar sponsored by the trade publication, Travel Weekly, last month. She acknowledged there are places in Mexico that tourists should avoid, specifically Matamoros and Ciudad Juarez on the Texas border. (And frankly, aside from those looking to do a cheap booze run, I'm not sure who would have frequented those border towns even before the drug-cartel bloodbaths).

"But for the rest of the country, you can relax and enjoy yourself," she told the Travel Weekly audience.

Actually, as someone who has traveled all over Mexico, I think I'd also skip Acapulco, which had a spate of nasty drug-related killings in September. But Acapulco many years ago ceased to be an American vacation destination.

Mexico's tourist sweet spot is Cancun, about 1,000 miles from Ciudad Juarez. Aside from an August bar shooting in a working-class neighborhood far removed from the resort zone, there has been no reported drug violence there. Another popular, earthier destination, is the Copper Canyon, which lies more than 200 miles from the border, or about the distance between New York and Baltimore.

"If you were planning a trip to New York, would you cancel it if you heard about challenges in Baltimore?" Guevara asked.

Vacation costs -- mainly hotels -- are down in Mexico. The average tourist spends about 5% less than in 2008, The Economist reports.

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