While living in Mexico last year, I got to see a little of this firsthand. During independence day last september, while I was watching fireworks in Cuernavaca, the drug cartels threw grenades into the crowd in Michoacan, killing and injuring dozens of people there just to celebrate and watch the fireworks.
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MEXICO CITY, Mexico (CNN) -- Gunmen shot and killed 17 patients and wounded two others in a drug rehabilitation center in northern Mexico late Wednesday, the mayor of Ciudad Juarez said Thursday.
Police gather at the rehab facility where 17 people were killed in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, late Wednesday.
Mayor Jose Reyes Ferriz said authorities believe a rival drug gang attacked the men at the El Aviane rehab facility.
"At the very least, it was one organized crime group thinking that another group was operating in that place," Reyes told CNN.
Wednesday night's shootings, he said, are similar to an attack at a drug facility in March that left 20 patients dead.
A Mexican civic group said last week that Ciudad Juarez, across the border from El Paso, Texas, had the most slayings per capita in 2008 of any city in the world.
More than 1,420 people have been killed in Juarez this year, Reyes told CNN on Monday. About 1,600 people were killed in Juarez in 2008, Reyes said.
The latest Juarez killings came on the same day that gunmen shot dead the No. 2 security official and three others in Michoacan, the home state of Mexican President Felipe Calderon.
Jose Manuel Revuelta Lopez, the deputy public safety secretary of Mexico's Michoacan state, was killed in a shootout that also claimed the lives of two of his bodyguards and a bystander caught in the crossfire, said Jesus Humberto Adame Ortiz, spokesman for the state.
Revuelta was leaving his office at 5:15 p.m. in the state capital, Morelia, when the shooting occurred, Adame said.
An unprecedented wave of violence has washed over Mexico since Calderon declared war on drug cartels shortly after coming into office in December 2006. More than 11,000 people have since died, about 1,000 of them police.
The offensive against the government has been especially fierce in Michoacan.
In July, La Familia Michoacana drug cartel was accused of assaults in a half-dozen cities across the state and of torturing and killing 12 off-duty federal agents and dumping their bodies on a remote road. That violence was thought to have been retaliation for the arrest of a La Familia leader.
In Juarez, much of the violence is being committed by the rival Sinaloa and Juarez drug cartels, which are fighting for lucrative routes into the United States as well as local street sales, Reyes said.
The deportations of thousands of Mexicans who have served time in U.S. jails into Ciudad Juarez are adding a deadly ingredient to an already volatile state of security, he said.
In the past 45 days, 10 percent of those killed in Juarez had been deported from the United States in the past two years, Reyes said.
"We don't have the statistics to know if they were criminals from the United States or not," he told CNN. "We know they were deported from the U.S. Most of them come from U.S. jails. They end up in the city of Juarez, and that's a problem generated for us, but also for the United States."
Most deportees are simply Mexicans who crossed the border illegally, but some hardened criminals get involved with the gangs, which have networks in the United States, Reyes said.
According to a report released last week by the Mexican Citizens Council for Public Security watchdog group, Juarez had an estimated rate of 130 killings per 100,000 people. The city has a population of around 1.5 million.
By comparison, the homicide rate in New Orleans, Louisiana, the deadliest city in the United States in 2008, was 64 homicides per 100,000 residents, based on preliminary FBI figures.
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Honestly, I think this is another reason we need to tighten up our borders. We do not need this to spill over into the US. It's easier to keep it out than to stop it later. While we do that, we need to help Calderon end it there so it doesn't further escalate and spill over. This is something previously only seen in South America, but it has spread further and further north and cannot be ignored any longer.
I say Jamás to Hamas!
11 months ago
6 comments:
James, as you know, asking the narcos to forsake their profits is not going to work.
The single most effective thing we can do here in the US is lower demand. Once we do that, the Mexican middle men will look to ship their product elsewhere.
Yes, we can lower the US's demand and make a smaller market for them. But Mexico needs help too. They seem to be going through a similar situation that we went through during the 1920's with the gangsters...
That's an interesting analogy James. I hadn't thought about that.
What kind of help are you proposing?
We were able to stem the flow of violence from the 20's gangsters. Perhaps, if they would allow it, our FBI could help them come up with a similar organization (and training). Perhaps some teamwork?
Actually James, we are training their forces in this area.
The problem is that when their term is up, they leave the military, or the PFP, and join forces with the narcos, often with exorbitant salaries that the private sector in Mexico cannot hope to match.
This is exactly what is happening with the Zetas.
Here is the "deal" many receive. An offer to "work" for the narcos, or Zetas for a salary nice salary of say $5000.00 a week. If you refuse, the ante is then upped to include a chance for your family to live.
SO here then are your options. If they make you an offer, you either take the money, or you and your family die, since you can now identify them.
How do we combat this???
I know it will be an uphill battle, but if this were to happen in the US, we have the US Marshall's witness protection program for those afraid for their lives or families. If they are taking the bribe, they get prosecuted for corruption.
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