
The U.S. State Department has planned an updated travel warning for tourists visiting Mexico issued by the information on drug violence in a standby basis and city by city.
The new warning is presented more detailed in response to concerns raised by tourism officials in Mexico, expressed earlier that the travel warnings for U.S. tourists generalized anxiety about the threat of criminal violence in Mexico, worried.
"The Tourism Board of Mexico has been a long time to travel warnings, which calls for meet on three fundamental principles: context, clarity and specificity," said Rodolfo Lopez-Negrete, chief operating officer of the Board of Promotion Mexico Tourism. "The revised U.S. State Department travel warning for Mexico adheres to these principles and should serve as a model for the rest of the world to serve."
The latest warning says that 47,515 people were in drug-related violence in Mexico between January 2006 and 30 December 9, 2011 dead. The number of U.S. citizens reported to the Department of State, as in Mexico increased from 35 in 2007 killed 120 in 2011.
But the travel warning said that tourist destinations are not usually the center of narco-violence movement.
The above U.S. warning Travel to Mexico was mentioned in several states last April, in which violence could pose a threat to tourists in general, and warned me of the northern coasts of the U.S.
In contrast, describes the travel warning said Wednesday that the recent drug violence in several states and cities.
For example, in the state of Aguascalientes, said the warning. "You do not want to move but essential travel to areas of the state that the state of Zacatecas, the security situation along the border with Zacatecas left unstable and shootings between criminal groups and public authorities to act. Concerns include locks roads by people who have been appointed as police officers or military and recent gun battles between rival [transnational criminal organizations] with automatic weapons. "
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