Rosarito Beach Security Q&A
Q-What is Rosarito offering to the Spring Breakers?
Rosarito is offering sandy beaches, outdoor activities, delicious
food, great shopping, accommodations, hospitality, entertainment,
affordable prices and fun.
Q-Is it safe to visit Rosarito?
Rosarito is safer than ever before. We created the Tourist Police
Force, a bilingual new group of young officers to protect and help
visitors, and a Tourist Attention Office, working 24/7 for any incidents
our visitors may have during their stay in Rosarito.
Q-Do you have any advice for the Spring Break Students?
They must use common sense like when visiting any city in the
world; stay always within the tourist areas; avoid dark-isolated areas,
and stay close to their friends.
Q-Are there any other rules tourist have to observe during their visit
to Rosarito?
Do not drink nor carry open liquor bottles in the streets or when
driving; drugs and firearms are not allowed in Mexico, and respect
traffic signals. If someone gets stopped by the police, they must ask
for the bilingual traffic ticket. They can pay the bilingual traffic
ticket fine with a U.S. check from home. Fines are converted to dollars
at the back of the ticket.
Q-Is violence affecting tourists?
Not a single tourist has been affected by serious crime in the
last year. Publicized violence is not directed against common citizens
or visitors. It is a battle amongst drug cartels always very far away
from the tourist areas.
Dr. Jim Gerber Director of Latin American Studies at San Diego State
University recently wrote an article about violence in border cities
and how it is affecting people on both sides of the border. This in an
excerption of the article:
“The murder rate in Tijuana is less than 40 per 100,000, which puts
it between Oakland, CA and St. Louis, MO. That is high, but
less than Baltimore and Detroit (mid-40s) and well below New Orleans (65
to 95, depending on who you talk to). New Orleans is a great place
to visit, and we have yet to meet anyone who decided not to go due to
its murder rate.”
“In addition to crossing the border fairly frequently, we have talked
at length to our colleagues at various institutions throughout the
border region, all of whom assure us that although crime has increased,
our students, colleagues and average US citizen are not targets any more
than are average Mexican citizens and they look forward to our continued
interactions with them.”
If you need more information about Rosarito dial U. S. Toll Free:
1800-962-BAJA or log onto: www.rosarito.org.
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