Four years on, drug war bleeds Mexican heartland
Grisly assassinations and gang extortion are terrifying Mexicans in the western state of Michoacan, where President Felipe Calderon launched his war on drug cartels, sending in about 5,000 soldiers in December 2006 following a narrow election victory.
Despite heavily armed patrols, hundreds of drug lab busts and thousands of arrests, locals say gangs in the president’s home state wield huge power, ramping up drug output while using terror and bribes to control towns mired in poverty.
Almost 300 people were killed by drug hitmen between January and October in the state, and Michoacan’s 2010 total could near the 371 executions seen in 2009, according to Eduardo Guerrero-Gutierrez, an independent drug trade analyst. Total murders jumped to 2,265 last year, compared to 560 in 2006.
"Crime has only gotten worse. Before, things were calm. Now you don’t know what could happen," said Miriam Ortiz, a 32-year-old teacher. Sitting by the pink stone cathedral in Michoacan’s capital Morelia near where a drug gang grenade attack killed eight in 2008, she added: "We are afraid here."
The army’s arrival on December 11, 2006, in the lush valleys of Michoacan, only a few hours from Mexico City, was hailed by many Mexicans and Washington as a bold departure after decades where drug lords were allowed to control vast fiefdoms in league with dirty politicians.
The military onslaught has been followed by massive troop deployments from Mexico’s Caribbean to the U.S. border in a bid to replace corrupt police forces while they undergo reform.
But the traffickers in Michoacan continue to openly defy authorities, despite the added presence of elite police.
Earlier this month, drug hitmen blocked roads with burning cars and set fire to a gas station after security forces arrested two local smugglers, effectively shutting down Morelia.
Gunmen fired 1,700 rounds into an armored vehicle carrying the state police chief in April. The official barely survived and later resigned. Reporters are too fearful to report on drug killings and seven journalists have been killed since 2006.
Meanwhile, Calderon’s unprecedented effort to break the ties between officials in Michoacan and traffickers suffered an embarrassing setback this year when judges released 30 local mayors and politicians arrested in 2009 on corruption charges. The judges cited a lack of evidence.
As the bodies pile up -- more than 31,000 across Mexico since December 2006 -- 49 percent of Mexicans say Calderon’s drug war is a failure, according to a poll issued last week.
"The traffickers continue to operate and find ways around the authorities. They evolve and develop new alliances, and they survive," said Eric Olson, an organized crime analyst at the U.S.-based Woodrow Wilson Center’s Mexico Institute.
Calderon insists there is no turning back, that violence shows gangs are becoming desperate and that he is winning.
"We will persevere until we leave Mexico free of the cancer of organized crime," he said in a speech on Sunday.
METH VALLEY
Marijuana has been a major cash crop since the 1950s in Michoacan, raised among the state’s avocado and mango orchards. But the rise of methamphetamine production turbocharged both gang profits and the violent clashes over control of billions of dollars in proceeds made by satisfying U.S. demand.
Drug trafficking in Michoacan is dominated by a cult-like band of thugs known as La Familia (The Family), which uses Christian evangelical propaganda to discipline its members while controlling locals with bribes and extortion rackets.
La Familia has even built churches and punished men accused of rape. "They’ve won the hearts and minds of some of these communities," said a U.S. law enforcement official.
A string of mysterious statements, allegedly from La Familia, has raised speculation the gang could be weakening.
In banners strung up across Michoacan in November, La Familia said it was looking for a truce with the federal government. Even if La Familia has been disrupted, analysts think other gangs could quickly take their place.
The Zetas, one of Mexico’s most ruthless gangs, has moved into the state, expanding from northeastern Mexico.
Federal authorities have had a hard time gaining local trust, with complaints of torture and rape by soldiers lodged at Michoacan’s state human rights commission.
On a recent afternoon in the central square of the bustling city of Uruapan near Morelia, couples, groups of old men and clusters of youths watched warily as a contingent of federal police pulled on their ski masks and climbed into armored vehicles to set off on a patrol of their new beat.
"You do not know who to watch out for, the bad guys or the federal police," said a 60-year-old farmer as he sat on a bench with his wife, who added: "Calderon said he would make things better in Michoacan, but things have gotten worse."
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