US travel advisory update applies only to Ciudad Juárez

Further restrictions on Mexican travel by United States government employees have been widely interpreted as a new travel alert for several Mexican states, but they are not.

The U.S. State Department revised its travel advisory for Mexico yesterday by announcing that a July 13 personnel restriction against travel to the downtown area of Ciudad Juárez will continue until further notice because “the higher rates of homicides during daylight hours that prompted that determination have not decreased . . . .”

The Chihuahua border city has seen a drastic spike in homicides.

But nothing else appears to have changed in the Mexico travel advisory.

At least one Mexican newspaper implied that travel warnings for Colima, Sinaloa, Tamaulipas, Michoacán and Guerrero were new, where in fact they have not changed since January. Several U.S. newspapers offered similar reports, some linking the updated advisory to the violent murders this week of eight people in Cancún.

The bodies — three were dismembered and one was beheaded — were discovered during an eight-hour period on Tuesday in various parts of the city, bringing to about 350 the number of assassinations so far this year.

But there has been no change in the United States’ travel advisory for Cancún or Quintana Roo.

The state government said today that incidents that occurred this week are related to actions between organized crime groups and have not involved local citizens or visitors.

The violence is attributed to turf wars between the Jalisco New Generation Cartel and Los Zetas, as well as other regional crime gangs.

Source: ABC (en), Infobae (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
aerial view of the scene of the operation to kill cartel boss El Mencho in Tapalpa de Allende, Jalisco

No tape, no guards: How did reporters access El Mencho’s home after the military operation?

1
Among the people who entered a house that is said to have been the CJNG leader's final hideout were journalists from the newspapers Milenio and El Universal, who found what appears to reveal the cartel's monthly operating expenses.
middle east

More than 1,300 Mexicans have been evacuated from the war-torn Middle East

0
Mexican embassies in the region are supporting citizens by arranging commercial flights through safe open airspace as well as helping with the logistics of land travel.
fishing boats in Gulf

Gulf cleanup effort is complete, but the question remains: What caused the oil slick in the first place?

0
Sanctions cannot be imposed without a culprit, but earlier efforts to blame at first a natural seepage and then an unnamed private vessel have been set aside for lack of conclusive evidence.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity