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Last updated on February 12, 2012 at 16:49 EST

Mexican, U.S. border states try to stem drugs war

July 14, 2005

By Eduardo Quiroz

TORREON, Mexico (Reuters) – Governors from U.S. and Mexican
border states tried on Thursday to improve security on a long
and porous frontier hit by a vicious war on drugs and fears of
terrorist attacks.

California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, who has upset Mexico
with controversial comments against illegal immigration,
traveled south of the border to join other governors in the
Mexican city of Torreon with security topping the agenda.

“One of the greatest challenges our nations face is cutting
off the drug trade and ending the violence it has brought to
communities on both sides of our border,” Texas Gov. Rick Perry
said in a videotaped message.

Hundreds of people have been killed this year in a war
between Mexico’s drug cartels for control of the lucrative
cross-border trade in cocaine, marijuana and amphetamines.

The worst violence has been in the border city of Nuevo
Laredo, where 87 people have been murdered this year and about
30 American citizens have been kidnapped since last August.

The U.S. government has called on Mexico to do more to stop
the violence and twice warned U.S. citizens about travel to
cities south of the Rio Grande. Mexico responded by telling
Washington to stay out of its affairs.

Both sides adopted more diplomatic tones on Thursday and
pledged close cooperation in the fight against drug cartels and
in preventing militants from slipping across the border to
launch terrorist attacks in the United States.

“Texas stands ready to help in any way we can to put an end
to the rash of kidnappings and drug-related violence that has
claimed hundreds of lives,” Perry said.

In the two-day meeting, governors are looking at plans to
improve the flow of intelligence about drug cartels, youth
gangs and possible terrorist threats between police on both
sides of the border.

“We have to stand up to the violence on the border,
especially the threat of organized crime and terrorism,” said
Enrique Martinez, governor of Mexico’s Coahuila state.

Schwarzenegger was on his first trip south of the border
since becoming California’s governor but made no speech at the
meeting’s opening session and was expected to fly home after
dinner with the other governors.

Schwarzenegger riled Mexicans in the 2003 gubernatorial
race, when he campaigned hard against a law granting driving
licenses to illegal immigrants.

He again sparked resentment earlier this year by praising
volunteer patrols for their “terrific job” in closing a stretch
of the Arizona border to undocumented migrants from Mexico.

Mexican President Vicente Fox called on the border
governors to ensure that migrants’ rights are respected.

“Mexico finds of great concern the actions of certain
civilian groups against migrants, respectable people with
dignified aspirations,” Fox said in a videotaped message.

About 11 million Mexicans live in the United States, many
of them illegally.

Schwarzenegger visited Mexico in his previous career as a
muscled-up action hero, filming the sci-fi shoot-up movie
Predator in jungle near the beach resort of Puerto Vallarta.

(Additional reporting by Tim Gaynor in Mexico City)


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