Has Anyone Passed the Laredo Border Recently?
Question by DTP: Has anyone passed the Laredo border recently?
I’m going next weekend to Mexico and I’m crossing that border. I just wanted to know if everything was safe over there and if a lot are people are crossing right now since it’s the summer and all. Thanks for your help!
Best answer:
Answer by mel
With all the warning, travel alerts and news items of increasing violence it is nerve wracking. Is it too dangerous to drive through Mexico
What do you think? Answer below!
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Why on earth would you think everything was safe? Last news report out of Nuevo Laredo had bodies hung on overpasses. No, there are not hardly any tourists crossing……. Mexican shoppers and people with real business, but not tourists.
I live in Laredo and stopped crossing about 6 years ago.
Here are some news reports: ” a Woman was beheaded for using social media to report on criminals, prosecutors said.
Maria Elizabeth Macias’s decapitated body was found over the weekend, the Tamaulipas state Attorney General’s Office said.
The 39-year-old journalist’s body was found by police on Saturday in Nuevo Laredo, which lies across the Rio Grande from Laredo, Texas, the AG’s office said.
Macias’s dismembered body was dumped at the Christopher Columbus Monument on a busy avenue in the border city.
The journalist’s legs and trunk were tossed in the grass, while her head was placed on a planter with a computer, mouse, cables, headphones and speakers.
Macias, who signed her postings as “La nena de Laredo” (The Chick from Lareodo), used social-networking sites to report on a criminal organization, the AG’s office said.
Two young people were murdered on Sept. 13 and their bodies were left hanging off a pedestrian bridge in Nuevo Laredo for using social-networking Web sites to report criminals.
The bodies of the young man and young woman showed signs of torture, and motorists were the ones who spotted the bodies and called police.
Messages warning others not to use social-networking Web sites to report drug traffickers were left on each of the bodies.
One of the messages was signed “Z,” a reference to Los Zetas, which operates along the border with the United States and is considered Mexico’s most violent drug cartel.
Mexico has become one of the most dangerous places in the world for journalists in the past few years, and the most dangerous country for members of the media in Latin America, non-governmental organizations say.
Hundreds of journalists and media industry workers took to the streets of Mexico City on Sept. 11 to demand that officials clear up the recent killings of two female reporters and punish those responsible for attacks on journalists.
Journalists have increasingly been targeted in recent years by drug traffickers and other organized crime groups, especially in northern Mexico.
Media members must also contend with long-running abuse at the hands of federal, state and local officials.
Since 2000, more than 70 journalists have been murdered and 13 others have gone missing in Mexico, the National Human Rights Commission, or CNDH, Mexico’s equivalent of an ombudsman’s office, said.
Authorities have not solved any of the cases of the journalists listed as missing since 2005 in Mexico, the Inter American Press Association, or IAPA, said in a report released last November.
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