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lequebecfume
07-03-2009, 03:22 AM
Extra troops fail to staunch Mexico bloodshed

By Oscar Laski – 2 hours ago

CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico (AFP) — Scorched by a blistering desert sun, military troops here form the frontline security cordon in a bitter battle against crime playing out in the heart of Mexico's bloody drug wars.

The post lies 35 kilometers (20 miles) from Ciudad Juarez, a city of 1.3 million inhabitants that borders the United States and has become the crime capital of the Latin American country.

Hundreds of men, who painstakingly search vehicles for drugs and weapons, are at the frontline of the massive military deployment Mexican President Felipe Calderon ordered following his 2006 election.

The conservative leader has mobilized 36,000 troops and policemen, including over 10,000 in Ciudad Juarez alone, seeking to achieve his top domestic priority: a return of security.

But just days before Sunday's legislative elections, the death toll in the vicious war that has pitted drug cartels against each another remains stubbornly high.

While Calderon insists the crime rate is falling, a steady stream of bodies fills the morgue in Ciudad Juarez which takes in an average of seven victims a day, according to Hector Jaule, who heads the city's Center for Expert Services and Forensic Science.

One swathed body lay on a stretcher, while another two were stacked on pallets, suffusing the morgue with a powerful stench, the smell of death that is ever present in this violence-plagued city.

The morgue is located in a modern complex where 110 people work in criminology, ballistics, chemistry and genetics as well as anthropology, all trying to unveil the hows and whys of the dozen murders that take place almost every day.

On June 23, figures from the center showed 1,164 people had already been killed this year -- most victims of organized crime -- compared to 2,392 for the whole of last year.

"I think that there will be more this year than in 2008," said chemist Rosa Almeida.

Most of the victims are young drug dealers, sometimes minors, who fight a bloody battle to control neighborhoods street by street.

But this fight pales in comparison to the war between the powerful Juarez and Sinaloa cartels to control drug trafficking routes toward the United States, the world's biggest consumer of cocaine.

The local forensics center's ballistics department resembles a military arsenal.

"This is the most powerful weapon confiscated in Juarez: a Barrett .50-caliber sniper riffle, which can pierce through any armor," explained ballistics expert Adriana Saenz.

Despite controls on the Mexican side of the border, firearms continue to flow into the country from the United States. On the side of the road that leads to Chihuahua, capital of the northern Mexican state of the same name, the military is at pains to confiscate illegal weapons.

And despite state-of-the-art equipment, including a huge metallic arm with gamma rays that can detect even the smallest trace of drugs in a truck, drug seizures remain pitifully small.

"Since this system was installed this year, the biggest seizures have been 51 kilos (112 pounds) of marijuana in a van and 5.8 kilos (13 pounds) of the same drug in a semi," said Mariana, a federal police officer who declined to give her last name.

In Ciudad Juarez, 1,800 federal agents and 8,500 troops regularly patrol the main avenues, but in tense neighborhoods, among them "Heroes of the revolution," located north of the airport, such patrols are less frequent.

"The situation hasn't changed. The military and federal police no longer come here," said Maria Contreras, a 35-year-old pastry cook.

Collaboration between federal reinforcements and local police is also at a bare minimum.

"We work little with the local police because they are not reliable. Many have been fired, but not all," a top federal police official told AFP.

Troops are relieved every 30 days to avoid them building up links with the wealthy cartels.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5i9qUdQ-326-zCOyQM1FKVMrKEvAw

Smokin Moose
07-03-2009, 09:14 AM
What's happening in Mexico is a tragedy!

lequebecfume
07-08-2009, 07:02 AM
Las Baladas Prohibidas

On the trail of narcocorridos, the drug ballads Mexicans love to hate.

http://www.motherjones.com/files/resized/files/Narcorridos-300x250.300wide.250high.jpg
—Photo: William T. Vollmann
July/August 2009 Issue

IT WAS THE GREAT LUPE VÁSQUEZ who first informed me of the existence of the baladas prohibidas.

We were at the 13 Negro drinking early in the evening, which is to say that it was not yet midnight and Lupe had not yet blacked out.

The jukebox exploded into another happy song, indistinguishable to my ignorance from the others, and the grim field workers at other tables nearly smiled, while the dancing couples on the metal floor grew livelier, and several men shouted along with the singer. Even Lupe, who trudged bitterly through life, cheered up when he heard this corrido, which was naturally so loud that he had to shout into my ear for me to apprehend that it dealt with the demure lady friend of a wanted drug lord who happened to be absent when two federales visited their residence, promising her that they wouldn't hurt him, so she told them to sit down and wait if so it pleased them; but while fixing refreshments she overheard their plan to liquidate her lover, so she sweetly invited them to rest just a moment longer, then strode out and blew them away!

Lupe's hatred of authority exceeded even mine, and for good reason; most days he had to deal with the lordly ways of United States immigration inspectors, of foremen who might or might not offer him a job and who if they did cared about their production quotas, not about his back; of companies who didn't pay him for the hours he had to sit in buses waiting for the frost to melt off the broccoli; and whenever he got a vacation from these entities, he got to visit the know-it-alls at the employment office in Calexico.

Now and then he had also enjoyed the hospitality of Northside's police and judges. That was why a few beers at the 13 Negro soothed the pain of the 13 Negro's prices, and when a certain sort of corrido came on the jukebox, Lupe even smiled.


http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2009/07/las-baladas-prohibidas

lequebecfume
07-19-2009, 09:23 AM
New escalation in Mexico drug war

http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/46082000/jpg/_46082384_007654775-1.jpg
Federal officials remain vulnerable in the state of Michoacan

Ten Mexican police officers have been detained in connection with the torture and murder of 12 federal agents during a major escalation in the drug war.

The arrests come as more than 5,000 troops and federal police are deployed in the western state of Michoacan.

The troop surge, one of the biggest in the anti-drugs campaign, comes after a local drug gang launched co-ordinated attacks in 10 cities last week.

The state governor has protested against the "military occupation".


The federal authorities say they are investigating links between the municipal police and drug traffickers in the murder of the agents, whose bodies were found bound and gagged and shot through the head next to a major highway.

In a statement, prosecutors said the detentions would enable them to strengthen evidence that the officers "undertook criminal acts" in support of the Michoacan drugs gang and to "determine their responsibility for the murder of federal agents".

Earlier this year 10 mayors in the state were arrested by the federal authorities on suspicion they were working with the drug gangs.

Cocaine transit

Troops with automatic weapons and ski masks to shield their identity have set up roadblocks across Michoacan, President Felipe Calderon's home state, in a major show of force.

Nineteen police were arrested in one small town, 10 of whom are still being held in custody while alleged links with drug gangs are investigated.

The federal government believes that local police and officials have long been in the pay of the drug gangs.

The Michoacan gang, known as the "Family", announced itself as a terrifying new force three years ago when its hitmen tossed the severed heads of five victims onto a dancefloor in a city nightclub.

Despite the roadblocks, analysts say federal agents remain highly vulnerable in a region where drug gangs can easily get intelligence about their movements.

http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/45604000/gif/_45604033_mexico_cartels_lab466map.gif


http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8157772.stm

DaMagoMan
07-19-2009, 09:48 AM
So damn ignorant,
we could just charge them a crossing/importation tax but they are way too violent to work with.
Just one more problem caused by the USA's 30+ years War on Drugs and Our 70+ year Prohibition an a Friggin' plant.