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MEXICO:
Drug Mafia-Style
Executions a Daily Event
Diego
Cevallos
MEXICO CITY, (IPS) -
Finding burnt corpses, bound or
wrapped in blankets, bearing
signs of torture and killed by
an execution-style shot to the
head has become routine in
Mexico. They are the victims of
a wave of drug
trafficking-related violence,
which has also become a thorn in
relations with the United
States.
Nearly 100 people were killed in
this fashion this month, mainly
close to the U.S. border, as
part of the bloody wave of
violence that broke out in 2005.
The deaths last year totalled
over 1,500, and the victims
included journalists, police
officers and members of the
military, but most of all young
men who were apparently linked
to the drug mafias.
The freedom of action enjoyed by
drug traffickers in Mexico
created tension again this week
with Washington, as has happened
so frequently in recent years.
U.S. Ambassador to Mexico Tony
Garza publicly rebuked the
administration of President
Vicente Fox on Wednesday for the
continued violence.
The latest row was triggered
when men dressed in army
uniforms and driving
military-style vehicles -
apparently Mexican drug
traffickers - drove across the
U.S.-Mexican border Monday and
engaged in a shoot-out with U.S.
police officers.
"The reaction from Washington
was the minimum that could be
expected, because it was a very
serious matter. Imagine what
would happen if presumed U.S.
soldiers came across into Mexico
- everyone here would be very
indignant," Jorge Chabat, a
researcher at the Centre for
Research and Teaching in
Economics (CIDE), told IPS.
The public recrimination
delivered by Garza to Mexico is
the third of its kind since
January 2005. Each time, the Fox
administration has responded by
complaining that the outbursts
were undiplomatic, while denying
all accusations.
Mexico and the United States,
which share a 3,200-kilometre
border, regularly tout their
"close cooperation" in the fight
against drug trafficking.
However, the incidents and
complaints are constant.
In his public statement, Garza
urged the Mexican government to
take the increase in
drug-related violence seriously.
"The level of violence certainly
is exceptional. Never before in
the history of Mexican mafias
has there been as much violence
as there is now," said Chabat, a
prominent expert on drug
trafficking and Mexico-U.S.
relations.
The government and analysts
attribute the exponential
increase in drug mafia-style
executions to an internal war
between cartels for control over
access routes to the United
States, the world's largest
market for illegal drugs.
The battle is thought to have
been sparked by the arrest of
the top drug kingpins, a
recognised achievement of the
Fox administration.
"What we are seeing is that the
government is unable to deal
with the consequences of those
arrests. It's as if it had hit a
beehive with a big stick, and
now it has no idea what to do or
how to control the bees," said
Chabat.
The Mexican government has
deployed hundreds of soldiers
and police to the areas where
the violence is at its worst,
and has announced strategies to
combat those responsible, but it
has not managed to stop the
murders.
Although the current wave of
killings attributed to drug
traffickers is of major
proportions, surveys indicate
that the violence does not
particularly worry ordinary
Mexicans.
"People basically see it as a
problem between criminals and
the police, that doesn't touch
them," Jeanette Golden, an
expert in public opinion polls,
told IPS.
Local drug traffickers, who have
agreements with cartels in
Colombia and other
drug-producing countries, supply
70 percent of the cocaine
consumed in the United States,
as well as large quantities of
heroin, methamphetamines and
marihuana.
The United States, one of the
world's leading producers of
synthetic drugs, is home to an
estimated 14 million drug users,
of whom four million habitually
use cocaine.
Although thousands of people
have been arrested and
prosecuted on drug trafficking
charges in the last few years,
and a number of cartel chiefs
and top operators have been
detained, U.S. authorities have
admitted that drug trafficking
remains alive and well.
The war on drugs is a failure,
and the fight will be
neverending unless demand falls
off, or the use of some
substances is legalised,
according to Raquel Paredes, a
researcher at the National
Autonomous University of Mexico.
Observers fear that the power
and present violence of Mexican
drug traffickers may have some
effect on Mexico's presidential
elections, scheduled for July.
But Chabat thought this
unlikely. Although the drug
trafficking world in Mexico is
violent and corrupt, it keeps
its distance from the country's
main political institutions, he
said.
"They might be interested in
buying off a few police officers
or minor officials, but they
prefer not to make too much
noise, because it's best for
their business," he added.
Mexico was governed by the
Institutional Revolutionary
Party (PRI) for 71 years, until
Fox, a member of the
conservative National Action
Party (PAN), was elected
president in 2000. During the
PRI period, many observers
talked about supposed close
links between drug traffickers
and the high echelons of power.
However, apart from the proven
links between a few low-ranking
officials and members of the
armed forces and the mafias,
nothing further has come to
light.
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