Showing posts with label cartel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cartel. Show all posts

Sunday, October 12, 2014

Mexicans unimpressed by cartel raids

12 October 2014 Last updated at 17:43 View of a grave in Pueblo Viejo, in the outskirts of Iguala, Guerrero state, Mexico, on October 6, 2014 At least 28 bodies were pulled from graves like this outside Iguala last week The grisly deaths of many trainee students in the southern Mexican town of Iguala is posing serious problems for President Enrique Pena Nieto, as the BBC’s Mexico correspondent Will Grant reports.

Hector Beltran Leyva and Vicente Carrillo Fuentes: two of the biggest names from two of the most notorious families in the history of Mexican drug trafficking.

Under normal circumstances, the arrest of both men within days of each other would have been cause for great celebration and self-congratulation by the Pena Nieto administration.

Instead, coming as it does amid the horror in Iguala, it has looked like a hurried and misguided response to a much deeper crisis.

With each day that passes, the authorities unearth more details of brutality, and more bodies, charred beyond recognition and dumped in shallow graves in the small town in the western state of Guerrero.

But unlike Beltran Leyva or Carrillo Fuentes, these victims were not involved in the drug trade. They were teachers. Or at least they were training to be at the time they were seemingly carried off to their deaths by the local police.

‘Hail of bullets’

Even to the hardiest drug war reporters in Mexico, the events in Iguala stand out as harrowing.

“We’ve seen many episodes of brutality in recent years”, says Marcela Turati, reporting from Iguala for the Mexican weekly, Proceso. “But perhaps because they’re students, this one feels different.”

Parents of killed or missing students pray in front of an altar in Ayotzinapa Parents of the students joined the search for their loved ones, but many fear the worst at this stage

The authorities are still to confirm exactly what happened in Iguala – or indeed, why – but the role of the police in the students’ fates is undeniable.

During a night of protest by the students in late September over job discrimination in rural schools, the police opened fire on them and vehicles they were travelling in, killing several.

Among the dead was a member of a 3rd division football team caught in the hail of bullets as they returned home on a bus.

At the behest of someone – be it police chief, local mayor or regional drug lord – the students were rounded up by the municipal police, and have not been seen since.

“Here we can talk of specific criminal acts carried out by the police,” says Ms Turati. “We know they first fired on the students. We don’t know at what point they might have handed the students over to other criminal actors, but we certainly know from the videos that they took them.”

Days later, the mass graves started to appear.

Narco-politics

Of those arrested over the abductions, 22 were local police officers. One of the detained men led the authorities to the graves and said the majority of the remains were the bodies of the missing students. The anguished families fear he is telling the truth.

Meanwhile the Mayor of Iguala, Jose Luis Abarca, his wife and his chief of police have fled and are wanted in connection with the attacks.

It is the extent of that “clear collusion” between the local authorities and the drug cartels, says journalist Marcela Turati, that has provoked the huge protests in Mexico City and elsewhere in the country.

Enrique Pena Nieto speaks about the 43 missing students Mr Pena Nieto said there was no room for impunity in any society under the rule of law

“People are angry,” she says. “This infiltration is part of the fabric (of society) here. This is what people mean when they refer to ‘narco-politics’ in Mexico.”

Both the Guerrero state governor, Angel Aguirre, and President Pena Nieto have come under growing pressure over their handling of the crisis.

Critics say the security forces did not take victims’ families’ calls for urgent action seriously until it was too late.

The president has also been denied any sense of victory he might otherwise have enjoyed over the arrest of Beltran Leyva and Carrillo Fuentes.

Instead of applauding his security forces over the past week, Mr Pena Nieto has been forced to use words like “outrageous, painful and unacceptable” to describe their actions.

In fact, to an angry and cynical public, the arrests seem like the federal government knew where the big fish were all along, but were just waiting for a politically expedient moment to haul them in – something the government denies.

Warehouse killings

As a presidential candidate in 2012, Enrique Pena Nieto poured scorn on the drug war strategy of the outgoing president, Felipe Calderon, saying there was little point in chasing down drug kingpins because they would always be replaced by one of their lieutenants.

Far better, he said – his advisers nodding sagely – to reduce violent crime across the board and bring an end to the sort of savage attacks in Mexico which stopped people from leading normal lives.

Since then, however, he has presided over the capture or killing of the heads of almost all the major cartels: the leader of the Zetas, Miguel Angel Trevino, alias Z-40, the head of the Betran Leyva Organisation, Hector Beltran Levya, the head of the Juarez Cartel, Vicente Carrillo Fuentes, and arguably the most elusive and significant capture of them all, the Sinaloa Cartel boss, Joaquin ‘El Chapo’ Guzman.

Yet events like Iguala continue to happen. Indeed, the disappearances in Guerrero knocked out of the headlines the revelations that 22 people had been killed in what appear to have been extrajudicial killings by the military, inside a grain warehouse in San Pedro Limon, in Mexico State.

Both episodes involve astonishing levels of brutality apparently carried out by the security forces against unarmed people.

Today the president seems to be no closer to his stated aim of forever breaking the links between organised crime and the apparatus of the state than he was as a candidate.


View the original article here



Mexicans unimpressed by cartel raids

Saturday, October 11, 2014

Mexico arrests alleged head of Juarez cartel

MEXICO CITY (AP) –  The alleged leader of the Juarez drug cartel, Vicente Carrillo Fuentes, has been arrested in the northern city of Torreon, two Mexican officials said Thursday.

Carrillo Fuentes, 51, heads the cartel founded by his late brother, Amado Carrillo Fuentes, and Mexico had offered a reward of 30 million pesos ($2.2 million) for his arrest.

It was the second capture of a major drug lord in as many weeks. Mexican authorities nabbed Hector Beltran Leyva as he ate fish tacos in a seafood restaurant in central Mexico on Oct. 1.

The two officials who revealed the information about Carrillo Fuentes’ arrest insisted on speaking anonymously because they were not authorized to speak to the press.

Carrillo Fuentes, better known as “The Viceroy” or “The General,” took over control of the Juarez drug cartel after his brother Amado, nicknamed “The Lord of the Skies,” died in 1997 in a botched cosmetic surgery. Amado got his nickname by flying planeloads of drugs into the United States.

Vicente carried on trafficking on a more modest scale, but in a much more violent era for the cartel. Based in the border city of Ciudad Juarez, Carrillo Fuentes led the gang in a battle for control of the area’s trafficking routes with interlopers from the Sinaloa cartel, engaging in a multi-year war that cost at least 8,000 lives. The area is estimated to be the route of passage for as much as 70 percent of the cocaine entering the United States.

Carrillo Fuentes, who like many top drug lords was from Sinaloa state, had a $5 million reward on his head from U.S. authorities, and a similar bounty of about $2 million was offered by Mexican prosecutors for information leading to his capture.

Immediately after his brother’s death, there were doubts among cartel members about Carrillo Fuentes’ ability to lead, according to a profile provided to The Associated Press by the Mexican Attorney General’s Office.

“He was not believed to possess the leadership and decision-making skills,” according to the document, noting this created internal tensions in the group.

In the end, he was able to consolidate what the profile called “an iron grip” on the cartel, while leading it in new directions. As demand for cocaine declined in the United States, the gang took to selling more of it in Mexico.

“He overcame the initial perceptions about his personality,” the document said.

Carrillo Fuentes was also known for establishing a series of shifting alliances that seldom worked out for long.

He initially allied his cartel with the Sinaloa Cartel, Mexico’s most powerful drug gang. But that alliance fell apart following the 2004 killing of another brother, Rodolfo Carrillo Fuentes, in Sinaloa. That killing was reportedly ordered by Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, the top Sinaloa drug lord. In revenge, Carrillo Fuentes allegedly ordered the killing of Guzman’s brother in a prison a few months later.

From that point on, the Sinaloa and Juarez cartels became locked in Mexico’s bloodiest turf battle.

That in turn led Carrillo Fuentes to establish another alliance of convenience with Sinaloa’s rivals, the Beltran Leyva cartel, and the Zetas, the most ruthless Mexican gang.

Carrillo Fuentes was allegedly protected by an “extremely violent” group of former soldiers, and the Juarez cartel pioneered the use of targeted car-bomb attacks on police.

Follow us on twitter.com/foxnewslatino
Like us at facebook.com/foxnewslatino


View the original article here



Mexico arrests alleged head of Juarez cartel

Sunday, February 2, 2014

VIDEO: Mexico anger at "Cartel Princess"

There’s been widespread anger in Mexico with the daughter of a drug cartel leader, after she posted pictures of herself on Instagram.


Melissa Plancarte, who is also a singer, posed in an outfit covered in the insignia of her father’s gang, The Knights Templar. Her father Enrique is one of seven leaders of the group, who control many areas of the embattled Michoacán in western Mexico.


These images have caused anger because “vigilante” groups have began fighting the cartels on the ground, and they are also now waging a social media campaign campaign against cartel leaders and their families. Mexico has a fascination with the culture associated with drug trafficking, but the pictures of the “cartel kids” showing the fruits of violence and drugs have caused anger.


Produced by Benjamin Zand


All our stories are at BBC.com/trending


Follow @BBCtrending on Twitter and tweet using #BBCtrending


View the original article here



VIDEO: Mexico anger at "Cartel Princess"