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  1. #1
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    Mexico sends 5,000 troops to guard energy facilities

    Mexico sends 5,000 troops to guard energy facilities

    3:08 PM PDT, July 12, 2007

    MEXICO CITY -- Mexican President Felipe Calderon has dispatched a new 5,000-strong elite military unit to guard strategic sites, including oil refineries and hydroelectric dams, in the wake of guerrilla attacks on pipelines operated by the national oil and gas company, Pemex, according to news reports Thursday.

    Business leaders said as many as 1,000 manufacturing plants and other businesses in the Guanajuato-Queretaro region of central Mexico have been forced to shut down or scale back operations this week due to fuel shortages caused by the July 5 and July 10 attacks.

    The leftist Popular Revolutionary Army, known by the Spanish initials EPR, claimed responsibility for the attacks Tuesday, saying they were in retaliation for the disappearance of two of their militants last year in the southern state of Oaxaca.

    The EPR communiqué said the rebels had bombed three pipelines and a switching station in the states of Queretaro and Guanajuato. The explosions severed natural gas pipelines and a crude oil pipeline that links storage facilities in the Gulf of Mexico port of Poza Rica to a refinery in Salamanca, Guanajuato, reducing fuel supplies in the region.

    A fire that had burned in Queretaro since a bombing at 1 a.m. Tuesday was extinguished late Wednesday, Pemex officials said. Two hundred workers were working Thursday to repair the damaged lines.

    Natural gas deliveries to residential customers have scaled back in several cities in the region this week, including Celaya and Irapuato.

    The attacks shook a government already facing challenges on several fronts: drug traffickers who outgun the police in several corners of the country, a stalled immigration reform bill in the United States, and declining output from Pemex, the country's main source of foreign exchange.

    "All we Mexican men and women of good will categorically reject violence because we wish to live in liberty and peace," Calderon said Wednesday in his only reference to the attacks this week, at a ceremony announcing a new commuter rail project for Mexico City.

    Calderon is dispatching the Corps of Federal Support Forces, an elite army unit created in May in response to the challenges of the government's war against drug trafficking, the newspaper El Universal reported Thursday. Mexican officials have confirmed the presence of troops at the oil facilities, but have not said which units have been sent.

    The Chamber of Transformation Industries, a business group, estimated that shutdowns caused by the pipeline explosions were costing businesses in central Mexico between $5 million and $10 million in losses each day.

    The region known as the Bajio, centered in Guanajuato and Queretaro, is home to some of Mexico's largest industrial plants. And at least a dozen major companies in the region reported shutdowns or slowdowns this week related to the attacks, including Honda Motor Co., The Hershey Co., Kellogg Co and Nissan Motor Co.

    Grupo Modelo SA, Mexico's largest beer maker, was impacted because Mexico's largest glassmaker, Grupo Vitro, temporarily shut down glass factories in Queretaro and Guadalajara.

    "The damage to the economy is serious," Ruben Aguilar Valenzuela wrote in the commentary in the newspaper Reforma on Thursday. "This [guerrilla] action was well thought out.... They picked a strategic objective."

    According to news reports, Mexican authorities believe the bombers used an explosive gel often used in underground mining. A similar explosive was used in an attack on three banks in the southern state of Morelos in 2005.

    hector.tobar@latimes.com

    http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld ... ome-center

  2. #2
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    Mexico has an army?

  3. #3
    Senior Member redbadger's Avatar
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    Mexico has an army?
    yeah... when they are not illegally migrating NORTH and running dope
    Never look at another flag. Remember, that behind Government, there is your country, and that you belong to her as you do belong to your own mother. Stand by her as you would stand by your own mother

  4. #4
    Senior Member Captainron's Avatar
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    Leftist radicals are so clueless. It's fine in theory but so very prone to some screwball taking over and acting like a real jerk.

    The most that these radicals will ever do is damage the infrastructure in a failed attempt to garner popular support in their crusade against perceived "injustice."

    While I would agree that there is injustice, particularly in places like Mexico. this is a different time and a different place than the United States of the "gilded Age" when unions and radicalism truly could make a difference. That was a situation where migration from the farms and the spread of mass production and industrialization were upsetting traditional values in Western societies.

    Now, even in Mexico, Latin America and even the poorer developing countries there are some critical differences:
    1. In Latin America the influence of US volunteers is HUGE. It is a huge trend, starting over thirty years ago, and now involving at least a few million volunteers in any given year working abroad to bring the blessings of modern culture, science and medicine to developing countries. Moreover, many of these volunteers are not only experts in their fields, they are trainers, too--training several people or more to carry on their work. If an individual or family is not getting help from any of these voluntary organizations it is only because they haven't heard. They have a very inclusive policy.
    2. This is the age of the Internet. Last week I talked to an old acquaintance who has spent the last few decades as a church planter in Mexico. I asked him about the spread of the Internet. He said that the town he was living in had many internet cafes "every few blocks." Rural areas might be different==but things are changing. So there is the opportunity for people to search via this modern means for something that will improve their situation.
    3. Non -religious groups are also intensely focusing on providing assistance to developing countries. There are numerous philanthropic foundations which are intensely at work providing various programs. Even Ted Turner is spreading his TV networks everywhere (not that this is such a good thing--I think it breeds discontent with their immediate situation.)

    These radicals would do better by cooperating with the self help and foreign assistance groups and organizing some reform political grouips rather than trying to sabotage and dismantle highly valuable infrastructure.
    "Men of low degree are vanity, Men of high degree are a lie. " David
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  5. #5
    Senior Member sippy's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by BrightNail
    Mexico has an army?
    If you could call it that. Many of the federal troops are going AWOL and being recruited by the drug cartels.
    "Doing the same thing over and over again and expecting the same results is the definition of insanity. " Albert Einstein.

  6. #6
    Senior Member zeezil's Avatar
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    Mexican President Felipe Calderon has dispatched a new 5,000-strong elite military unit
    http://www.the3stooges.net/members/1234 ... morons.mp3
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