Mexico's drug wars curtail holiday travel
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Every December for as long as Brenda Cardoso can
remember, her family has spent Christmas together at her grandmother's house
in Tijuana.

The celebration begins with nine days of posada parties and ends with an
all-night gathering on Christmas Eve, with presents, piņatas, songs and
homemade tamales.
But this year, her family is putting the tradition on
hold.
Cardoso, 25, said she and her family are scared of the escalating drug wars
and have decided to stay home in Downey for the holidays.
"It's not safe for us to gather over there," said Cardoso, who was born in
Mexico but is now a U.S. citizen. "It's sad because it was a tradition that
we grew up with. . . . Now, unfortunately, we can't do it because of how the
situation is in Mexico."
As Mexican nationals and Mexican Americans begin to plan
their holidays, many say they are choosing not to make the annual trek home
to visit relatives. While some are dissuaded by the worsening economy,
others are avoiding travel to Mexico because they fear the rampant
kidnappings, killings and shootouts.
The
U.S. State Department issued a travel alert late last month warning U.S.
citizens to take precautions and to be aware of the "increasingly violent
fight for control of narcotics trafficking routes," especially in the cities
of Tijuana, Chihuahua and Ciudad Juarez.
Business at Transportes Intercalifornias, which runs about 15 buses a day
from Los Angeles to the border towns of Tijuana and Mexicali, is already
down from last year, said dispatcher Robert Bahine.
"They don't want to go home because of the problems in TJ, all the shootings
and the killings," he said.
After Cardoso's uncle was a victim of carjacking and her cousin was mugged
at gunpoint, several of her relatives moved from Tijuana to the United
States. Cardoso and her family still own a house in the city, where they
used to spend one weekend a month, but they haven't spent the night there in
more than six months.
"It's never going to be the same," she said. "We can't go back, and we can't
feel free."
Mexicana Airlines has seen about a 4% drop from last year in bookings from
Mexicans traveling home to visit friends and relatives, said Jorge Goytortua,
vice president of sales for U.S. and Canada. But Goytortua attributed the
decline to the economy, saying that many regular customers work in affected
industries.
Mexico's consul general in Los Angeles, Juan Gutierrez Gonzalez, also said
he believes the economy is having a greater effect on travel than the drug
wars.
"People are making up their mind to go or not to go because of the expense
rather than the violence," he said.
But that is not the case with Yvonne Mariajimenez, a public interest
attorney in Los Angeles. Mariajimenez said she has the money to travel home
to see her relatives for Christmas but she is afraid to do so.
Mariajimenez, 50, said she has traveled to Mexico dozens of times in the
last decade and usually spends her visits driving elderly relatives to
neighboring towns to see one another. Her aunt told her that if she went
this year, she shouldn't rent a car or drive around the country.
"The more I talked to her, I realized that it wasn't just my safety that she
was concerned about, but it was hers as well," she said. "If they see a
foreigner, the assumption is that the person has money."
Though Mariajimenez was born and raised in the U.S., she said Mexico is a
part of her heritage and she is devastated by the increasing violence. She
said she had hopes of retiring in Mexico, which she remembers as a relaxing
and beautiful country, but worries now that may not be possible.
"The corruption of drug trafficking has really permeated these towns," she
said. "I am not sure the innocence of that time will come back."
Juana Flores has put off traveling to Rosarito to see her mother. Though her
mother insists that it's safe where she lives, Flores, 32, said she still
worries about taking her three children to Mexico.
As a parent, you don't feel comfortable," said Flores,
who works at a linens store in Lynwood. "I just don't think it's safe,
especially if they know you are coming from here."
And Martha Soriano, 54, president of the nonprofit that oversees the Casa
del Mexicano in Boyle Heights, said she plans to bring her parents here for
the holidays rather than visit them in Ciudad Juarez.
"You see the news, you read the newspaper, it's terrible
to see what's happening," she said.
Despite the concerns, many are undeterred.
More than 1 million Mexicans returned home last winter, according to the
Mexican government, which runs a program called Welcome Home Paisano aimed
at easing their passage, teaching them their rights and reducing corruption
by public officials. National coordinator Itzel Ortiz Zaragoza said that
based on summer travel, she expects about the same number this winter.
And Mexico's tourism board said the number of travelers
to the country actually increased by about 5% in the first seven months of
this year, compared with the same period last year. Officials said they
don't expect a decline during the holidays.
"The Christmas season is the most important holiday for Hispanics in general
(including Mexican Americans) to travel home to visit their families," Jorge
Gamboa Patron, director of the board for Los Angeles, said in an e-mail.
"If in fact there is a decline in travel during the upcoming holiday season,
it will probably be because of the U.S. economic situation."
Tres Estrellas de Oro in Huntington Park has seen a decline in people
booking air travel.
But supervisor Susana Cabellos said she expects bus travel to the Mexican
mainland to remain steady or even increase because it is less expensive.
Cabellos said that her customers talk about the killings but that they are
determined to see their families and "don't think anything is going to
happen to them."
Marielena Bravo, 22, said her family still has plans in December to visit
Michoacan, where her relatives live in a small town.
The town hasn't been immune to the violence. A few years ago, people dressed
like police officers interrupted a posada with guns drawn.
But Bravo, a student at Cal State Dominguez Hills, said she still believes
most of the problems are in the big cities. So when she goes, she doesn't
plan to leave her relatives' neighborhood.
"Especially being a young woman," she said, "you can't just walk around the
city."