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Caribbean-Latin America
A Report from Juarez, the Bleeding Front Line of the War on Drugs
2010-04-30
A lengthy article describing the War for Juarez, it's background, and some "who is who," even the extensive destruction of the city. Well worth the read for background info.
An eerie doom hangs over this ghostly border city, militarized by 4,500 soldiers and up to 5,000 federal police since 2008, and the soldier wearing the black-and-white skeleton mask at one of dozens of checkpoints erected throughout Juarez probably had a warped sense of humor. But it's symbolic of the escalating bloodshed witnessed every day, anywhere, at any time.

Since Mexican President Felipe Calderón deployed the military and federal police in 2008 across northern Mexico to halt violence among warring cartels, the deaths have mounted, and locals see a correlation.

By far, Ciudad Juarez has experienced the most violence, skyrocketing to about 5,060 murders in a little more than two years, and more than 700 from January through April alone. This compares with about 600 murders attributed to drug violence from 2006 to 2008. The Mexican government estimates 22,700 people have died in drug-related crimes across Mexico since 2006, when Calderón took office.

It's hard to keep up, but on any given day, between three and 12 people, including men, women and children, are gunned down or show up dead on streets or in ditches, sometimes hanging from a bridge, sometimes floating on the Rio Grande or nearby creeks. Many are involved in organized crime, but many are innocent. There seems to be no safe haven. People are killed in clinics, hospitals, funeral homes, shopping malls and baseball games.

The warfare is between the Juarez Cartel, headed by Vicente Carrillo Fuentes, and the Sinaloa Cartel, run by Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman. Although both are fugitives, they still run the show. In the past two years, however, Guzman has so far successfully encroached on Carrillo's turf, unleashing gang violence for the control of the opium trade as well as the marijuana, cocaine and methamphetamines pouring into the United States. Between 40 and 60 percent of Mexico's illegal drugs are smuggled across a 300-mile route that stretches from New Mexico to Texas, including the Big Bend National Park.
Posted by:Sherry

#4  It also causes people to lose sight of the real injustices (U.S. slavery and particularly its descendants) not the paltry inconvenience of being the victim of a human trafficking ring in Guatemala.
Posted by: bigjim-CA   2010-04-30 17:22  

#3  Tell it, Besoeker.
Posted by: M. Murcek   2010-04-30 14:50  

#2  Trafficking in people used to be called slavery.

The "S" word is only used as it relates to America's Civil War and the lineage of it's protected classes. It does NOT apply to Mexico, Cenral America, or thousands of years of the shameful practice still ongoing in Africa, or the Middle East.
Posted by: Besoeker   2010-04-30 13:25  

#1  Driving on a cold desert night to a small farming community along the Rio Grande where hit men had gunned down a man who stopped to buy a beer, the convoy of local crime photographers snapped away at a soldier manning a checkpoint. He was wearing a skeleton mask, a "mask of death,'' as he pulled over drivers deemed suspicious and who could be carrying drugs or guns. The soldiers were guarding a main highway outside Ciudad Juárez that leads to communal farming communities that mostly grow cotton and alfalfa along the river.

Seems like more people on this side of the border are getting their panties wadded up about stopping people and asking them for identification in attempts at stemming the epidemic of drugs in the U.S. and the trafficking in people for prostitution and other illegal activities. Trafficking in people used to be called slavery. You'd think the people complaining about all this such as Al Sharpton and others would have some interest in trying to curb such illegal activities.
Posted by: JohnQC   2010-04-30 13:08  

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