I copied these from Lexis-Nexis
Copyright 2005 The Houston Chronicle Publishing Company The Houston Chronicle
June 19, 2005, Sunday 4 STAR EDITION
SECTION: A; Pg. 1
LENGTH: 1616 words
HEADLINE: NUEVO LAREDO;
In the shadow of violence, residents won't give in to fear
SOURCE: Staff
BYLINE: JAMES PINKERTON
DATELINE: NUEVO LAREDO, MEXICO
BODY:
NUEVO LAREDO, MEXICO - By 10 a.m., guitarist and singer Guillermo Zacarias is making his morning rounds of a half-dozen downtown cafes, where he trades traditional Mexican ballads for tips.
By working cafes in the mornings, restaurants at dinnertime and taco stands late at night, he earns 250 to 300 pesos a day, $ 25 to $ 30 in U.S. currency.
Zacarias, along with hundreds of thousands of fellow Nuevo Laredo residents, is quietly living his life. He and his wife are raising two young children and building a home, mostly oblivious to the backdrop of drug trafficking, murder and kidnappings that has focused international attention on this sprawling commercial center.
Copyright 2005 The Houston Chronicle Publishing Company
The Houston Chronicle
August 02, 2005, Tuesday 3 STAR EDITION
SECTION: A; Pg. 12
LENGTH: 682 words
HEADLINE: U.S. calls on Fox to end violence;
Officials say Mexico needs to do all it can to stop the killings in Nuevo Laredo
SOURCE: Staff
BYLINE: DUDLEY ALTHAUS, JAMES PINKERTON
DATELINE: MEXICO CITY
BODY:
MEXICO CITY - With the American consulate in Nuevo Laredo closed in protest Monday, U.S. officials called on Mexican President Vicente Fox's government to "do what is necessary" to bring the gangland violence there under control.
"In short, we would like them to do what needs to be done to put an end to the violence," a State Department official said, on condition of anonymity, through the U.S. Embassy's press office. "We believe that the Mexican government has that capability."
U.S. Ambassador Tony Garza last Friday closed the consulate in Nuevo Laredo for a week, following a shootout in an upscale residential neighborhood that involved automatic rifles, grenades and rocket launchers. The State Department officials on Monday said the U.S. government wants to see drug gangs in the city denied such heavy weaponry.
Nuevo Laredo, a city of about 500,000 across the Rio Grande from Laredo, has had more than 100 murders in the first seven months of the year, most of them related to a war between drug gangs for control of smuggling routes into Texas.
Hundreds of Mexican soldiers, as well as state and federal police, have been patrolling the city since mid-June, following the gangland-style murder of the city's new police chief. However, troops and federal police did not arrive at the scene of Thursday's gunbattle until after it ended.
Scores of people have disappeared in recent years, including several dozen Americans, in incidents officials say also are linked to the narcotics trade.