Translated by Valor for Borderland
Beat
Michoacán is one of the states with the most violence
in the country due to the dispute between drug cartels in the Tierra Caliente region,
which covers 17 municipalities in the state along with nine in Guerrero and
five in the State of Mexico.
The fight from organized crime for the control of the
plazas and the inability of the state government to maintain a state of peace
caused the armed uprising of hundreds of civilians from the communities of La
Ruana and Tepalcatepec to make up groups called autodefensas in February 2013.
The civil uprising, consisting mainly of merchants,
farmers and ranchers immediately won the sympathy of michoacanos and a year later, more than 30 towns of 20
municipalities had their own autodefensas.
Shootouts, deaths, extortions, kidnappings, rapes, and
the presence of the Caballeros Templarios and Jalisco Nueva Generación cartels,
products from local governments without any control, and the then PRI governor Fausto
Vallejo Figueroa, put the entire country on alert and Michoacán became the
first challenge of the administration of Enrique Peña Nieto.
On January 15 2014, the federal government appointed Alfredo
Castillo Cervantes as the Commissioner for Security and the Integral
Development of Michoacán. His objective
was to restore public confidence in the institutions of law enforcement, in
addition to legalizing and integrating the groups of autodefensas that emerged in the state into the Fuerza Rural.
Despite Peña Nieto’s attempts to maintain order in Michoacán,
violence and terror didn’t leave the state and the figure of the commissioner
failed. On January 22 of this year, Enrique
Peña Nieto ordered the departure of Castillo and instead appointed General
Felipe Gurrola Ramírez in his place.
The situation of anarchy that the state of Michoacán lived
through and the scandals that stemmed from a series of videos where the son of
the former governor of Michoacán, Rodrigo Vallejo Mora, appeared in alongside
members of organized crime such as Servando Gómez Martínez, “La Tuta”, led to
Fausto Vallejo’s resignation as the Governor of Michoacán.
El Gerber and the videos
Rodrigo Vallejo, known as “El Gerber”, is another case
that remains pending in Michoacán.
Rodrigo Vallejo has appeared in several videos and photographs with
members of organized crime. From these
incidents, he was held in Santiaguito prison located in the State of Mexico in
August 2014; however, eight months later, he was released on bail after paying
seven thousand pesos ($449 USD).
And violence continues in the state, now ruled by the
academic Salvador Jara Guerrero.
On May 14, Enrique Hernández Salcedo, candidate for
the mayor of Yurécuaro, through the Movimiento Regeneración Nacional (MORENA) (National
Regeneration Movement), was fired upon during a political rally and minutes
later, died.
In another act of violence, on May 22 a shootout
between federal forces and alleged members of organized crime occurred in
Tanhuato, which left at least 43 dead, of which 11 showed signs of torture,
according to family members of the victims to the US newspaper The Washington
Times.
Shootouts in Tumbiscatío
A month later, on June 23, social network users
reported another alleged shootout in Tumbiscatío, which left 12 dead; however,
state authorities reported no conflict in the area.
Michoacán, amongst the states with
the most cases of manslaughter
The violent events that have occurred in Michoacán in
recent months have been recorded in statistics of various organizations such as
México ¿Cómo Vamos? and the Observatorio Nacional Ciudadano (ONC) (National
Citizen Observatory), which the latter presented a report this month about
Incidences of High Impact Crimes in Mexico during 2014.
The document revealed that the State of Mexico, Guanajuato,
Michoacán, Chiapas and Oaxaca surpassed one thousand investigations for
manslaughter.
Cartel Land
But the escalation
of violence in Michoacán crossed the borders and is now the subject of a
documentary that tells the story of two figures: the leader of the autodefensas in Michoacán, José Manuel
Mireles, and the leader of the Arizona Border Recon (AZBR) in the United
States, Tim Foley.
“Cartel Land” is
the name of this controversial film that hits theaters in Mexico on July
2. The director, Matthew Heinerman,
expressed through images of severed heads, hanging corpses from bridges, cries
of torture that go through the walls of houses that have been turned into
makeshift prisons, the reality that currently exists in Michoacán.
Source: Sin Embargo
Why Why Why does Pena Nieto does not protect the innocent
ReplyDeleteThe PRI is going to mess around and be the cause of the Revolution. They be dumb
ReplyDeleteThe shootout that happened in tumbiscatio was near las cruces mich and there where seven dead its little cells of la tuta people that are fighting agansit each other i know cause one of the dead was uncle of my cousins wife
ReplyDeletereported homicides are not a guide, as there about three times more unreported homicides
ReplyDeleteMy respects for these brave men. All Mexico should fight for their rights to be free from crime and f uped government!!
ReplyDeletethose michoacanos have some brave souls!!!
DeleteNot a single word about Dr. Mireles. How sad.
ReplyDeleteWhy is doctor mireles still in prison......do I have to get a team of armed men and shot it out to break him out???? Peña nieto I give 48 to figure shit out other wise I'm fire you.....sincerely "Donald Trump"
ReplyDeleteestas loco...pinche post ni sentido tiene
DeleteYou give 48 what? Thats funny y no se me raje mi cenizo aqui al cien desde california esperando el cargamento
DeleteWhile they say the elections is over and el pri won a majority of 33.4% of the vote, the state lawyers are still studying the Mireles case for 2 more months, but they don't know how to "red and/or 'rite" while kissing peña nieto's ass...
ReplyDelete--i'd say the opposition won with a 66.6% of the vote against epn, and they did not buy extort, falsify or burn one single vote...
--mexican legislators are too busy getting paid millions (dollars or pesos?) for selling epn's pemex and will NOT write any legislation to protect any mexican from any mexican government officer's authority, no matter what...
Is Cartel Land going to hit theaters in the States?
ReplyDeleteYes.
Deletehttp://cartellandmovie.com/#screenings
There is no more hope for Mexico. Who ever gets elected president next is sure stepping in Hells Hole n there aint no light in the other side.
ReplyDeleteThere will always be hope for Mexico.
DeleteIts been said Michoacan is the soul of Mexico. And all sickness, is a sickness of the soul.
ReplyDeleteMichoacan is known as the soul of mexico. like nevada is the silver state...
DeleteMexico will get better for the politcos and the cartels, and continue to walk over the people because the people will not fight
ReplyDeletebb why did you guys take out the cartel pand article?
ReplyDelete