Los Angeles Times

U.S. puts 5 Mexican states on its do-not-go list

Travel warning places those violence-ridden areas in Category 4, alongside countries racked by war.

- By Kate Linthicum kate.linthicum @latimes.com Twitter: @katelinthi­cum

MEXICO CITY — Weeks after Mexico logged its deadliest year on record, the United States urged its citizens not to visit five violence-ridden Mexican states, placing them in the same danger category as war-torn Somalia, Afghanista­n and Syria.

In an advisory made public Wednesday, the State Department issued “do not travel” warnings for the northeaste­rn border state of Tamaulipas and the Pacific coast states of Colima, Guerrero, Michoacan and Sinaloa.

Although the U.S. has discourage­d travel to all or some of those states in the past, its new evaluation is sterner, giving the states its highest risk Category 4 warning. Countries given that classifica­tion include Libya, Yemen and others engulfed in conflict.

Mexico as a whole was given a Category 2 rating, with U.S. citizens implored to “exercise increased caution.”

“Violent crime, such as homicide, kidnapping, carjacking, and robbery, is widespread,” the advisory said.

The advisory is the latest recognitio­n of Mexico’s surging violence, which claimed 22,409 lives in the first 11 months of last year — more killings than in any year since the government began releasing crime data in 1997.

The bloodshed, fueled by increased U.S. demand for heroin and a power struggle within one of Mexico’s most powerful drug cartels, is on the rise in a majority of Mexican states.

The violence has even encroached on the long-safe tourist havens of Cancun and Los Cabos, where in December the bodies of four men were found hanging from a highway overpass.

Between January and November, there were 62 homicides per 100,000 residents in Baja California Sur, where Los Cabos is located. That’s about 2 times the 2017 rate in Chicago, a city that has received considerab­le attention for violence.

The State Department warned citizens about traveling to Los Cabos and Cancun last summer, sparking fears that it could affect Mexico’s $20-billion-a-year tourism industry, which represents about 7% of the country’s gross domestic product. Wednesday’s travel advisory repeated those warnings, but issued the two states where they are located Category 2 designatio­ns, calling for Americans to exercise increased caution but not stay away.

That’s good news for Mexican authoritie­s who lobbied the U.S. to keep the tourist hot spots off the Category 4 list, security expert Alejandro Hope said.

“I’m guessing they are breathing a sigh of relief,” he said.

 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? THE VIOLENCE in Mexico has even encroached on the long-safe tourist havens of Cancun and Los Cabos. The bloodshed is fueled by increased U.S. demand for heroin and a power struggle within a drug cartel.
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times THE VIOLENCE in Mexico has even encroached on the long-safe tourist havens of Cancun and Los Cabos. The bloodshed is fueled by increased U.S. demand for heroin and a power struggle within a drug cartel.

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