The New Observer
January 3, 2016
Nonwhite cities in Latin America, the United States, and South Africa are the most murderous places in the world, according to new statistics issued by Mexico’s Citizen’s Council for Public Security and Criminal Justice (CCSP-JP).
The figures, drawn from 2014 data, analyzed official statistics to create a list of the fifty most murderous cities in the world, and show unequivocally the link between high nonwhite populations and crime—including in the four US cities which made the ranking.
San Pedro Sula in the South American state of Honduras kept its title as the most murderous city on earth for the fourth year running, with a homicide rate of 171.20 per 100,000 inhabitants.
Close on its heels were the Venezuelan city of Caracas (115.98 murders per 100,000 inhabitants), the Mexican city of Acapulco (104.16 murders per 100,000 inhabitants), and João Pessoa in Brazil (79.41 murders per 100,000 inhabitants).
Of the top fifty cities listed, nineteen are in Brazil, ten in Mexico, five in Colombia, four in Venezuela, four in the United States, three in South Africa, and two in Honduras.
The one common theme of all these cities is that they are overwhelmingly nonwhite—a fact which, not surprisingly, is completely ignored in the CCSP-JP report.
South and Central America are, as the report shows, the most violent places on earth. This has great significance for the continued invasion of the US by natives of that region. The Third World population transfer from Latin America is rapidly transporting the criminality and violence from the south to the north of the Americas.
In addition, the large black areas of the cities of St. Louis, MO (49 murders per 100,000 inhabitants), Detroit, MI (44 murders per 100,000 inhabitants), New Orleans, LA (39 murders per 100,000 inhabitants), Detroit, MI (44 murders per 100,000 inhabitants), and Baltimore, MD (33 murders per 100,000 inhabitants), ensure that the US is also placed in the top fifty list.
It comes as no surprise to find three cities in South Africa making the top fifty list—but, contrary to what many may believe, the most murderous city in South Africa is not the blackest, but the majority-mixed race city of Cape Town.
That city has a murder rate of 60 per 100,000 inhabitants, making it the fourteenth most murderous city in the world, five slots ahead of even the most murderous US city, St Louis.
The link between mixed race populations and high criminality is also confirmed by the high murder rate in South and Central America, where the populations are also largely of mixed race.
The top 50 cities listed are as follows, ordered by the homicide rate per 100,000 inhabitants:
- San Pedro Sula (Honduras) 171.20
- Caracas (Venezuela) 115.98
- Acapulco (Mexico) 104.16
- João Pessoa (Brazil) 79.41
- Distrito Central (Honduras) 77.65
- Maceió (Brazil) 72.91
- Valencia (Venezuela) 71.08
- Fortaleza (Brazil) 66.55
- Cali (Columbia) 65.25
- São Luis (Brazil) 64.71
- Natal (Brazil) 63.68
- Ciudad Guayana (Venezuela) 62.13
- San Salvador (Honduras) 61.21
- Cape Town (South Africa) 60.00
- Vitoria (Brazil) 57.00
- Cuiabá (Brazil) 56.46
- Salvador (Brazil) 54.31
- Belém (Brazil) 53.06
- St. Louis (USA) 49.93
- Teresina (Brazil) 49.49
- Barquisimeto (Venezuela) 46.46
- Detroit (USA) 44.87
- Goiânia (Brazil) 44.82
- Culiacán (Mexico) 42.17
- Guatemala (Guatemala) 41.90
- Kingston (Jamaica) 40.59
- Juãrez (Mexico) 39.94
- New Orleans (USA) 39.61
- Recife (Brazil) 39.05
- Campina Grande (Brazil) 37.97
- Obregón (Mexico) 37.71
- Palmira (Columbia) 37.66
- Manaus (Brazil) 37.07
- Nuevo Laredo (Mexico) 34.92
- Nelson Mandela Bay (South Africa) 34.89
- Pereira (Columbia) 34.68
- Porto Alegre (Brazil) 34.65
- Durban (South Africa) 34.48
- Aracaju (Brazil) 34.19
- Baltimore (USA) 33.92
- Victoria (Mexico) 33.91
- Belo Horizonte (Brazil) 33.29
- Chihuahua (Mexico) 33.29
- Curitiba (Brazil) 31.48
- Tijuana (Mexico) 29.90
- Macapá (Brazil) 28.87
- Cúcuta (Columbia) 28.43
- Torreón (Mexico) 27.81
- Medellin (Columbia) 26.91
- Cuernavaca (Mexico) 25.45