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  1. #1
    Senior Member ShockedinCalifornia's Avatar
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    MEX: Historic capital explodes in violence (info for Canada)

    Historic capital explodes in violence

    (photo) Lethal Connections
    The drug war in Mexico might seem far away - but it's having an impact in Canada. The Star's Linda Diebel and photographer Carlos Osorio trace the lethal connections. (May 29, 2009)

    (photo) AGENCIA REFORMA
    Fernando Marti with his parents, Alejandro and Matilde Marti, in 2007. The boy’s abduction en route to school turned him into an icon.

    Map: Drug cartel territories (PDF)

    Series of related articles:
    SATURDAY: Mexico moves north. On overnight patrol with the Vancouver Gang Task Force.
    SUNDAY: Life and Death in Narcoland. On the job with Tijuana's coroner.
    MONDAY: Behind the tourist mask. What tourists don't see.
    TUESDAY: The Journalist. Life with a Mexican journalist who fled for his life after writing about drug cartels.
    WEDNESDAY: The Law. With U.S. drug czar Alan Bersin.
    TODAY: Life In Mexico City. The startling kidnap and murder of a teenager exposes police corruption.
    TOMORROW: Who's winning?
    SATURDAY: Selling the Drug Lords – Pop culture in Mexico


    Jun 04, 2009 04:30 AM
    Linda Diebel
    STAFF REPORTER

    MEXICO CITY–Nothing could save Fernando Marti, 14, from being kidnapped and murdered last summer – not his personal bodyguard, chauffeured bullet-proof sedan nor other precautions routinely taken by this city's wealthy to survive the grip of organized crime.

    But something turned this student, abducted at a phony police roadblock on his way to the private British American School, into an icon.

    Maybe it was the crime's obvious link to narco-trafficking, as evidenced by the resignation of Mexico's special drug agency chief, Noe Ramirez, shortly after police began the kidnapping investigation, or that charges against him ultimately connected him to the cartels.

    Maybe it occurred when two senior Mexico City judicial police officers (under the authority of the attorney-general's office) were arrested and charged in the youth's murder. Or when Mayor Marcelo Ebrard pledged to dissolve the entire judicial police and start over.

    There were mass protests in the capital, countrywide marches, full-page newspaper ads over the violence and, after the boy's father reportedly paid a $5 million ransom in vain, an outpouring of sorrow and compassion that united political leaders and ordinary citizens.

    President Felipe Calderon appealed to local, state and national police forces to stop building their own little silos and start working together. "If we were more united by now, we surely would be more advanced (and) much further along the road to improving the police," said Calderon, who made ending narco-trafficking and corruption priorities in 2006. "We must purge police forces to get rid of the infiltration by gangs."

    Or, maybe, it was simply the ghastly shock of it all in a city (and country) where kidnapping – attributed to the same drug cartels that move drugs, cash and people in multi-billion-dollar businesses – is on the rise, as are other forms of violent fallout from the activities of organized crime.

    Bogus police officers abducted Marti in June. Police quickly found his driver mutilated – his teeth extracted – and dead in the trunk of his sedan. They also found the youth's bodyguard, badly injured, but able to implicate police in the crime.

    For two months, the search continued. In August, residents noticed a foul odour in the southern area of Coyoacan, home to artists, musicians and intellectuals.

    The boy's decomposing body was in the trunk of a car.

    "Let there be no more Fernandos," said his father, Alejandro, founder of a sports store and health spa empire. He grieved for "a boy who represents the suffering over everything that is happening here."

    What's happening is an explosion of violence in a city that's among the world's greatest capitals, renowned for its churches, museums, architecture, sprawling parkland and the historic role it has played as a political, artistic and literary leader in Latin America.

    It's been very dangerous in Mexico City for a long time. Kidnappings – the crime most often linked to narco-wars and the drug cartels – have jumped 9.5 per cent nationwide, according to Mexican officials, with 774 cases from September 2008 to April 2009, compared to 707 over the preceding eight months. But statistics are considered grossly low since most people don't report kidnappings.

    "The growth in the number of kidnappings comes from the success of the government's battles against drug dealers," popular columnist Miguel Angel Granados Chapa wrote recently in the Mexico City daily, Reforma. He argues drug-traffickers must find other ways to augment their income.

    There is the so-called "express kidnappings," in which Mexicans and tourists are nabbed, usually by "pirate" cab drivers and their cohorts, driven to bank machines and ordered to withdraw cash. In "virtual kidnappings," criminals extort money from family members who falsely believe a loved one has been seized.

    A few years ago, a bogus taxi driver and pals abducted an American journalist at a restaurant and went through the bank-machine routine. Discovering he was a reporter for a well-known publication, a thief urged: "Oh please, don't write bad things about my country."

    Mexicans go to extremes to try to stay safe. There is a reported boom in the sale of tracking devices that can be inserted into flesh – like the way veterinarians insert microchips into pets – to potentially help police find victims.

    In Polanco, a wealthy northern area of homes, embassies, restaurants and hotels in the capital, chauffeurs drive their clients in SUVs with dark, bullet-proof glass. Parents who send their children to school with drivers change the routes and vary their own routines to confuse would-be kidnappers.

    While there is no official warning against going to Mexico, Canada's foreign affairs department notes kidnappers target "both the wealthy and middle class (although) foreigners are not specifically targeted."

    The U.S. State Department has a different view.

    "Crime in Mexico continues at high levels, and it is often violent, especially in Mexico City ... (and other cities)," says a recent report. "Kidnappings, including the kidnappings of non-Mexicans, continue at alarming rates."

    http://www.thestar.com/news/world/article/645293

  2. #2
    Senior Member vmonkey56's Avatar
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    Don't go to Mexico, and try not to get kidnapped in America!
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  3. #3
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    go to the link above, there is a FIVE part series called
    "Lethal Connections Series" along with a link to the map below


    http://multimedia.thestar.com/acrobat/4 ... 960eab.pdf

    PDF of map

  4. #4
    Senior Member vmonkey56's Avatar
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    Close the BORDERS, NOW!
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

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