Tijuana’s elite flee to San Diego County to escape kidnappings and violence in Mexico

Posted on: June 9th, 2008
Filed Under: [ Tomás' Picks ] [ People ] [ California ] [ San Diego ]
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“Nearly 40 years after they opened their first Tijuana restaurant, the entire extended family — 18 people, including Javier Plascencia’s wife and four children — moved across the border to a suburb southeast of San Diego.

Such migrations have become increasingly common in metropolitan areas along the U.S.-Mexico border, as the ongoing violence of a brutal drug war has disrupted lives from Tijuana to Nuevo Laredo, across the Rio Grande from Texas. The Mexican government has sent more than 3,000 troops into Tijuana in the last 1 1/2 years, and on several occasions soldiers have shot it out with drug cartel gunmen on residential streets.

“San Diego is the only place you can forget the sense of insecurity and fear. There, you can breathe. Psychologically, crossing the border relieves the stress,” said Guillermo Alonso Meneses, a professor of cultural studies at El Colegio de la Frontera Norte in Tijuana.”*

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