From FAIR <[email protected]>
Subject Scary Headlines Hype Dangers Rarely Faced by Tourists in Mexico
Date March 7, 2023 10:31 PM
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Scary Headlines Hype Dangers Rarely Faced by Tourists in Mexico Saurav Sarkar ([link removed])


USA Today: Reconsider travel? Safety experts talk violence in Mexico tourist spots

"Reconsider travel" to Mexico, asks USA Today (10/2/22 ([link removed]) )? Cancun has a relatively high homicide rate, but it's 24% lower than Baltimore's, which we haven't seen the paper warning tourists away from. Cozumel, meanwhile, has a homicide rate ([link removed]) lower than 38 major US cities ([link removed]) .

Planning a trip to Mexico? If you read the news these days, you would think that Americans ought to be terrified of the popular tourist destination.

Headlines abound like “Killing of Artist Brothers Shatters Mexico City’s Veneer of Safety” (Guardian, 12/23/22 ([link removed]) ) and “Reconsider Travel? Safety Experts Talk Violence in Mexico Tourist Spots” (USA Today, 10/2/22 ([link removed]) ).

Of course, a headline isn’t the text of an article, but it’s frequently all readers see ([link removed]) , and their constant repetition about the alleged dangers posed by simply being in Mexico is disturbing.

Most recently, you might have seen a version of “US Issues Strongest Possible 'Do Not Travel' Warning for Mexico Ahead of Spring Break" (LA's Fox 11, 2/9/23 ([link removed]) ) in a local news report headline. But read down to just the first line, and you’ll see that the warning ([link removed]) is for only six of Mexico’s 31 states, not for the entire country—nor does it apply to Mexico City, by far the country's largest metropolis, which is in its own federal district.

Nonetheless, the article goes on to say, “Other countries that are under the same highest-level travel warning include Iran, Iraq, Somalia, Haiti, Ukraine, North Korea and Syria.”

Take a breath, Fox 11.


** One of the most-visited countries
------------------------------------------------------------
ABC: Bar employees stabbed inspectors at Mexico resort

AP (via ABC, 2/21/23 ([link removed]) ) offers news you can use, if you're a Playa del Carmen bar inspector.

Isolated incidents, like the murder of a US resident in Zacatecas (CBS News, 1/25/23 ([link removed]) ) and the possible extortion and death under mysterious circumstances of a US lawyer near Tijuana, described in the Fox 11 article above, do happen, particularly in the parts of the country where cartel violence is out of control.

But this must be placed in context. Mexico is a country—yes, one with social violence—that is consistently among the most visited in the world ([link removed]) , in large part due to US tourists. The country had 32 million visitors in 2021, which was down from a pre-pandemic high of 45 million.

While they're often happy to produce click-bait headlines that spark fear in potential travelers, many corporate media outlets seem less interested in giving those readers any sense of what level of risk the average tourist visiting a popular Mexican tourist destination might actually face.

Consider the article, “Bar Employees Stabbed Inspectors at Mexico Resort” (AP, 2/21/23 ([link removed]) ). The AP devotes four of seven paragraphs to providing context, which offer that Playa del Carmen "has long had a reputation for rough and dangerous bars," "has long had a problem with illicit business," and has been the site of two shooting attacks in the last five years, at least one of which killed tourists.

That emphasis certainly suggests that tourists to Playa del Carmen ought to be worried about being shot while there. The article does not offer the context that Playa del Carmen is in the state of Quintana Roo, which the State Department puts in the same travel advisory category as France. Or that according to the US State Department ([link removed]) , four US tourists were murdered there in 2021 (the last full year for which there's data)—out of some 4.8 million visitors ([link removed]) from the States that year, making homicide on a trip there literally less than a one in a million chance.


** Spring break crime crisis
------------------------------------------------------------
Fox: Mexican beach town announces major crackdown amid country's crime crisis ahead of spring break

Fox News (2/21/23 ([link removed]) ) paired a report about increased police patrols in Playa del Carmen with video of a Polish tourist climbing an off-limits pyramid in Chichen Itza, in a different state.

Fox News (2/21/23 ([link removed]) ), predictably, went even further, offering, “Mexican Beach Town Announces Major Crackdown Amid Country’s Crime Crisis Ahead of Spring Break."

In case you miss the point about the ginned-up crisis, and whom it purportedly affects, the article was paired with a video of a white European tourist, climbing the steps of a Mayan pyramid in a totally different state, who was heckled and took a few cheap shots while being escorted out for breaking the rules.

Yet, as tourism advice website TravelLemming.com (1/19/23 ([link removed]) ) notes in a much more balanced piece, “Playa del Carmen is, overall, a relatively safe place to visit.” The piece focuses as much on Covid, water contamination and crocodiles as it does on cartels.

Where it does talk about violence, it does so in measured and specific terms:

In general, unless you’re using drugs, purchasing drugs or are involved with people who are affiliated with cartels, chances are you won’t be the victim of a cartel-related incident.


** As scary as France
------------------------------------------------------------

Carlos Vilalte, a geographer of crime based in Mexico City, says that although there are no official statistics kept of crimes against tourists, he has “no knowledge of tourists being particularly targeted for crime, either in tourist locations, or anywhere else.” He notes, though, that they might be affected “collaterally.”

This is because there is violence in Mexico–a lot in some places, often fueled by drug consumption ([link removed]) in the United States. Several cities, like Tijuana ([link removed]) , are among the most dangerous in the world that are not in a literal war zone. “Organized crime is a serious issue in Mexico,” says Vilalte.
Courier Journal: US tourists beware: Popular Mexico getaway plagued by drug cartel intimidation and violence

The Louisville Courier Journal (8/25/22 ([link removed]) ) offers "Mexico's Yucatan peninsula" as a "refreshing alternative" to Cancun—which is on Mexico's Yucatan peninsula (though not in the state of Yucatan).

But roughly three-fifths of the country’s states are under the first ("Exercise normal precautions") or second ("Exercise increased caution") levels of the State Department’s system for alerting US travelers to possible danger. These areas, according to the government’s system, are as safe as or safer than France ([link removed]) and Spain ([link removed]) (both of which carry warnings about “terrorism and civil unrest”).

You wouldn’t know that from headlines about the Riviera Maya like “US Tourists Beware: Popular Mexico Getaway Plagued by Drug Cartel Intimidation and Violence" (Courier Journal, 8/25/22 ([link removed]) ), or the Fox News article mentioned above, which says:

“Violent crime and gang activity are widespread," the [State Department] warning said of one area. "Most homicides are targeted assassinations against members of criminal organizations."

This would be terrifying if you were planning to travel to the resort town, if you didn’t know better—or read down to the end, where even Fox News is forced to admit, “The state of Quintana Roo where Playa del Carmen is located is not included on the State Department's ‘do not travel’ list.”

It's a xenophobic double standard: You'd be hard pressed to find a US media outlet suggesting foreign tourists should beware of visiting our own country because of social violence in New Orleans or St. Louis, or even Dallas or Portland, Oregon ([link removed]) , all of which now have higher murder rates than Mexico City.


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