Guerrero
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Guerrero | ||
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Location | ||
Statistics | ||
Capital | Chilpancingo | |
Largest City | Acapulco | |
Area | 64,281 km² Ranked 14th |
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Population (2005 census) |
3,115,202 Ranked 11th |
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HDI (2004) | 0.7296 - medium Ranked 30th |
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Governor (2005-2011) |
Carlos Zeferino Torreblanca Galindo (PRD) | |
Federal Deputies | PRD: 9 | |
Federal Senators | PRD: 2 PRI: 1 |
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ISO 3166-2 Postal abbr. |
MX-GRO Gro. |
Guerrero is a state in Mexico named in honor of the second president of The Republic, General Vicente Ramón Guerrero Saldaña (10 August 1782 – 14 February 1831), a hero of the Independence War, who was of Spanish and Amerindian descent. General Guerrero was born in Tixtla, later renamed Tixtla de Guerrero. The state is bordered by the states of Michoacán to the west, México, Morelos, and Puebla to the north, Oaxaca to the east, and the Pacific Ocean to the south. Guerrero has an area of about 63,749 km². In 2003, the population was estimated at 3,167,400 people. The state capital is the city of Chilpancingo. Guerrero also contains the cities of Acapulco, Iguala, and Taxco.
The state is an important tourist destination. There are three main areas of tourism, known as the Triángulo del Sol (triangle of the sun). The first is Taxco, a colonial town noted for its silverware. The second is Acapulco. The third is Ixtapa/Zihuatanejo. Ixtapa is a destination created by the federal government to increase tourism during the slow economy of the 1980s. In Mexico the state is also renowned for violence, with vendettas deeply rooted in the local tradition (especially blood feuds between people of the coast and those of the mountains) and drug production in the mountainous interior.
Amnesty International, local Human Rights organizations like the Human Rights Center of the Mountains Tlachinollan as well as the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights denounce Human Rights violations like torture, arbitrary detention, forced disappearance and extrajudicial killings in Guerrero.
The climate of Guerrero is tropical for the most part but becomes more moderate closer to the Sierra del Sur.
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[edit] Government and politics
The Constitution of the State of Guerrero provides that the government of Guerrero, like the government of every other state in Mexico, consists of three powers: the executive, the legislative and the judiciary.
Executive power rests in the Governor of Guerrero, who is directly elected by the citizens, using a secret ballot, to a 6-year term with no possibility of reelection. Legislative power rests in the Congress of Guerrero which is a unicameral legislature. Judicial power is invested in the Superior Court of Justice of Guerrero.
[edit] Municipalities
The State of Guerrero is divided into 76 municipalities, each headed by a municipal president (mayor). Most municipalities are named after the city that serves as municipal seat; e.g. the municipal seat of the Municipality of Chilpancingo is the City of Chilpancingo de los Bravos.
[edit] Major communities
- Acapulco (Acapulco de Juárez)
- Chilpancingo (Chilpancingo de los Bravo)
- Iguala (Iguala de la Independencia)
- Taxco (Taxco de Alarcón)
- Tlapa de Comonfort
- Zihuatanejo
[edit] Famous people
The following is an incomplete list of famous people from Guerrero:
- Juan N. Álvarez, general and Liberal President of the Republic, born in Atoyac de Álvarez.
- Nicolás Bravo, army general, President of the Republic, born in Chilpancingo.
- Lucío Cabañas, guerrilla leader, born in Atoyac de Álvarez.
- Vicente Guerrero, insurgent leader, President of the Republic, born in Tixtla.
- Rodolfo Neri Vela, Mexico's first astronaut, born in Chilpancingo.
- Juan Ruiz de Alarcón, Siglo de Oro playwright, born in Taxco.
- Joan Sebastian, singer-songwriter, born in Juliantla.
[edit] External links
- (Spanish) Guerrero State Government
- (Spanish) Towns, cities, and postal codes in Guerrero
- Human Rights Center of the Mountains Tlachinollan
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