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>Press
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Murder
By Media:
What Misleading News
Coverage Is Doing To Mexico
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ROSARITO
BEACH, BAJA CALIFORNIA, MEXICO---In Rosarito
Beach, as in much of Mexico, we are fighting two
battles these days.
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One
is against organized crime. The other is
against misleading media coverage that
wrongly implies that much of Mexico is
unsafe for visitors and residents, and which
is devastating our economy.
Some reporters, stories and outlets have
been responsible and balanced, including
some of those who know this area best. Many,
perhaps most, have not.
The war that Mexico’s President Felipe
Calderon has launched against drug cartels
(which are fed in part by a $38 billion
yearly U.S. drug market) is indeed a serious
one, one of vital concern for both our
countries.
We welcome and invite serious and analytical
coverage of this struggle. Such coverage can
be of significant help to both countries,
which have much at stake.
What we don’t welcome is inaccurate,
sensationalized, unbalanced and unfair
coverage, which provides no insight but only
promotes fear and misunderstanding. There
has been far too much of this and it
continues largely unabated.
Some media reports are simply biased and
inaccurate. They are from individuals or
media outlets that have an agenda against
Mexico and will publish anything to promote
it, whether or not it is true.
What is more troubling are reports from
mainstream media that present an unbalanced,
superficial and worrisome portrait of what
life is like in Mexico, including Baja,
California.
This is sometimes done because
sensationalism sells; other times because of
lack of understanding: many reporters never
even visit. At other times, the situation in
one city is presented as if it represents
all of Mexico, a vast country.
Reports repeatedly talk of 6,000
drug-related deaths in Mexico in 2008. (That
surely is a troubling number, as is the
existence of organized crime and the
corruption it has caused. We’ve had to
work hard in Rosarito to clean it up and it
is a continuing challenge.) But what the
reports don’t mention when they talk of
killings is that Mexico is an immense
country of 110 million people.
The reports often don’t mention that while
some law enforcement personnel have been
killed, cartel members primarily are killing
each other as it becomes harder for them to
do business, as they fight each other for
shrinking territories.
What the reports also don’t mention is
that in 2008, according to MSNBC, the murder
rate in New Orleans was much higher than
that of Tijuana. (Yet you will not see many
if any stories warning people not to go to
New Orleans. Much of the U.S. media uses far
different standards when reporting stories
outside the U.S.)
More troubling, the reports seldom state
clearly that 90 percent or more of the
killings in Mexico are drug-related. The
typical resident is not targeted, nor is the
visitor. As in New Orleans --- as in gang
wars in Los Angeles --- the tourist is not
the target.
Yet, those who watch or read many
sensationalized media reports in the U.S.
have become afraid to visit our region of
Mexico, where tourism has dropped more than
50 percent, a reduction that has caused
painful economic hardship here.
Sometimes reports cite, out of context, the
U.S. State Department alert concerning
travel to Mexico, indicating it advises
people not to go.
In fact, while noting that drug-related
violence has increased recently in Mexico,
the alert (not a warning) in part advises
“common-sense precautions such as visiting
only legitimate businesses and tourist
areas.’ That’s good advice for travelers
most anywhere.
The U.S. State Department also notes that
“millions of U.S. citizens safely visit
Mexico each year (including thousands who
cross the U.S. land border every day for
study, tourism or business).” You can read
the entire alert on the U.S. Customs
website.
Our many frequent visitors and expatriate
residents (we have 14,000 in Rosarito alone)
are among those who speak strongly of
feeling secure here. They know the situation
first-hand --- not from media reports.
This is not to say that Mexico does not have
some crime problems, or that no visitor or
U.S. resident will ever be victim of a crime
in Mexico. With more than 20 million annual
visitors and hundreds of thousands of
expatriate residents, a crime will
occasionally happen, just as it does in the
U.S. and other countries.
But that is rare here.
More typical is the experience of Jack
Flynn, owner of the Professional Longboard
Association, who is a part-time Rosarito
resident and has been coming here for
decades to surf. He never has had one
problem. He encourages people --- including
fellow surfers --- to come see for
themselves.
A graduate-level public affairs class at
Emerson College, a prestigious
communications school in Boston, recently
began doing a study on U.S. coverage of
Mexico. Already it has found many instances
of sensationalism and bias, including from
some prestigious media outlets from which
better should be expected.
No one at Emerson is getting paid for this
project. It is being conducted because the
professor of the class, Gregory Payne, saw a
vast difference between life in Rosarito,
where his family has a home, and what the
media was reporting.
He simply could not recognize the safe and
enjoyable Rosarito he knows first-hand from
the one he was encountering in media
reports. He knows that with recent changes,
Rosarito probably is safer than ever ---
despite the impression created by many media
reports.
We hope the Emerson project, along with
other efforts and the media’s
self-examination of its own reporting, will
result in fairer coverage in the future. In
the meantime, please talk to those who know
the area first-hand --- or visit yourself
--- to get an accurate picture.
Right now, you’re not getting one from
many media reports.
(Hugo Torres is in his second three-year
term as Mayor of Rosarito, which he began
in December of 2007. Since taking office he
has reformed the police force, adding a
special tourist police force, and an office
for visitor assistance.) |
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CONTACT
INFORMATION:
gilberto@rosarito.org
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