- Drug cartels go after
police officers in Mexico
- By Mark Stevenson
- Associated Press
CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico (AP) — May 18, 2008
- Drug cartels are sending a brutal message to police and
soldiers in cities across Mexico: Join us or die.
The threat appears in recruiting banners hung across roadsides and
in publicly posted death lists. Cops get warnings over their
two-way radios. At least four high-ranking police officials were
gunned down this month, including Mexico's acting federal police
chief.
Mexico has battled for years to clean up its security forces and
win them the public's respect. But Mexicans generally assume
police and even soldiers are corrupt until proven otherwise, and
the honest ones lack resources, training and the assurance that
their colleagues are watching their backs. Here, the taboo on
cop-killing familiar to Americans seems hardly to apply.
Police who take on the cartels feel isolated and vulnerable when
they become targets, as did 22 commanders in Ciudad Juarez when
drug traffickers named them on a handwritten death list left at a
monument to fallen police this year. It was addressed to "those
who still don't believe" in the power of the cartels.
Of the 22, seven have been killed and three
wounded in assassination attempts. Of the others, all but one have
quit, and city officials said he didn't want to be interviewed.
On Sunday, city spokesman Sergio Belmonte confirmed that Juarez's
police chief had submitted his resignation and said he would be
replaced by a military official on leave from the armed forces.
"These are attacks directed at the top commanders of the city
police, and it is not just happening in Ciudad Juarez," Mayor Jose
Reyes Ferriz said at the funeral of the latest victim, police
director Juan Antonio Roman Garcia. "It is happening in Nuevo
Laredo, in Tijuana, in this entire region," he said. "They are
attacking top commanders to destabilize the police force."
The killings are in response to a crackdown launched by President
Felipe Calderon, who has sent thousands of soldiers and federal
police across the nation to confront the cartels. Drug lords have
hit back by sending killers to attack police with hand grenades
and assault rifles.
Police are increasingly giving up. Last week, U.S. officials
revealed that three Mexican police commanders have crossed into
the United States to request asylum, saying they are unprotected
and fear for their lives.
"It's almost like a military fight," said Jayson Ahern, the deputy
commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border Protection. "I don't think
that generally the American public has any sense of the level of
violence that occurs on the border."
On May 8, Edgar Millan Gomez, who had taken over as acting federal
police chief, just 10 weeks previously, was shot by a lone gunman
outside his Mexico City apartment. Police blamed the Sinaloa
cartel and said a police officer was among the suspects arrested.
The U.S. Embassy in the capital flew its flag at half-staff.
"Mexico has lost another hero," Ambassador Tony Garza said in a
statement. "Mexico has lost too many heroes in the fight against
criminals and drug cartels."
Mexican government institutions didn't lower their flags, but held
elaborate funerals.
In Ciudad Juarez, police have been given assault rifles — they
used to just carry pistols — but also are instructed not to patrol
streets alone. More than 100 of the city's 1,700-member force have
resigned or retired since January.
Soldiers are also in the cartels' sights. The Zetas, an infamous
group of soldiers-turned-drug hit men, strung banners above
highways with slogans such as "The Zetas want you — we offer good
salaries to soldiers," and taunts about low army pay.
The conflict has become a battle for the loyalty of police and
civilians.
"Juarez Needs You! Join up and become part of the city police,"
say enormous city billboards. The jobs offer salaries about three
times higher than those offered by the foreign-owned "maquiladora"
factories that are the city's biggest industrial employer.
But police and soldiers keep deserting to the cartels, giving
traffickers inside knowledge about tactics and surveillance.
And because of their history of corruption and abuse, police and
soldiers run into suspicion as they patrol the border slums where
traffickers throw children's parties, hand out cell phones and
employ taxi drivers and youths as lookouts.
A Mexican army captain leading about a dozen soldiers raiding a
Ciudad Juarez slum gazed over a maze of alleys, shacks and, in the
distance, El Paso, Texas, gleaming in the sun. He said the drug
lords' spies are everywhere, tipping off their bosses to
approaching troops.
Many residents complain of heavy-handed army tactics.
"These guys don't care about anything," Lalo Lucero, 44, a former
migrant worker in New Mexico, said as he watched soldiers detain a
neighborhood youth. "They came into my house without a warrant,
searched through everything and told me to sit on a couch and not
say anything."
The army's public relations office did not reply to requests for
comment. But authorities have tried to improve the troops' image
by blanketing Ciudad Juarez with pictures of a soldier manning a
machine gun and the slogan "We Are Here to Help You."
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