Posted by DD, republished from Daily Beast
It seems they have tried everything in Guerrero. In 2013 the first
all-female armed Citizen Police group was formed in Xaltianguis. The
force is made up of mostly middle-aged housewives, mothers and
grandmothers. (See Chivis BB story)
By
Guerrero is infamous for gang wars
and the disappearance of 43 students. Not only have efforts to bring
law and order failed, they may have made matters worse.
When the French tricolor on Facebook became ubiquitous after mass murder in Paris,
thousands of Mexican users responded with a reminder of a lesser-known
war in their own country. (DD. I have to admit that as tragic as the atrocity was in Paris, my first reaction was why don't the mass murders in Mexico get the same attention and news coverage) In the image, the Mexican flag is draped,
translucent, over the gruesome portrait of a Mexican mother and her two
small children slain execution-style in the southern state of Guerrero.
Their bodies are splayed on a gravel path in a rural setting. The
mother’s eyes remain open. The infant boy lies face down on her lap. The
girl, a skinny 7-year-old in pink flip-flops, is sprawled at her feet.
“Let’s see how many Mexicans make this flag their profile pic,” reads
a comment on one Facebook post that has been shared more than 15,000
times.
To observers of violence in Mexico, the state of Guerrero was
supposed to be last year’s news. In 2014, the murder rate was the
highest in Mexico and eight times the national average. It was the year
that 43 students from the Ayotzinapa rural teachers’ college were taken
into police custody in the town of Iguala
and disappeared. A search expedition did not locate the missing
students, but uncovered hundreds of hidden graves of unidentified human
remains buried in the gloomy hills outside the town.
But rather than exhaust itself, the violence in Guerrero seems only
to have gotten underway. The murder rate so far in 2015 is 29 percent
higher compared to the same period a year ago. And what is most shocking
about the new wave of violence is how generalized it has become
throughout the state. The effects of the turmoil are being felt
everywhere from the small towns of the Sierra region to the western port
and resort of Acapulco.
Five police commanders from Acapulco were assassinated between April
and October of this year. The level of violence directed at the local
cops is unprecedented in the city’s history, according to the Mexican
investigative journalist and author David Espino. The Guerrero state
prosecutor sets the overall number of gangland executions in Acapulco at
754 so far this year—an average of 2.3 per day. The tourist economy is a
shambles: The magazine Proceso reports that a thousand
businesses and 14 schools have closed due to violence, and cruise ships
have all but ceased calling at the port.
The authorities in Guerrero tend to attribute most drug-related
violence there to “a settling of scores” between rival gangs. This is
the explanation that Espino received from an anonymous source in the
prosecutor’s office, that the police commanders had done favors for one
drug gang only to be murdered by a rival group.
The authorities tend to avoid getting involved in such “settling of
scores”; 89 percent of the murders committed in Guerrero go unpunished
in the state court system, according to the 2015 Mexico Peace Index.
Guerrero has not only the highest murder rate in Mexico, but the highest
rate of impunity.
The new governor, Héctor Astudillo, was elected
in June on a campaign pledge to bring “peace and order” to the state.
But he has not been able to stanch the bloodshed. Not even with the
latest infusion of federal troops to the state announced last month by
Mexico’s Interior Secretary Miguel Osorio Chong.
Since Astudillo took office on Oct. 27—restoring the long-ruling
Institutional Revolutionary Party to power after a 10-year absence—there
have been at least 30 murders in Guerrero.
Security analysts
doubt that the promised surge of federal troops to troubled areas will
have the desired effect. Mexican security forces in Guerrero suffer from
deepening public suspicion. A report by the International Crisis Group
found that impunity on human- rights abuses and high levels of
corruption have caused an erosion of public trust in federal troops.
As InSight Crime notes, “This has created a situation where horrific
crimes like the 2014 disappearance of 43 students are no anomaly, but
rather part of a pattern of violence that goes unpunished under the gaze
of complicit or inept officials.”
The surge of violence in the mountainous interior adheres to the same
pattern as Acapulco. That area is prized territory—its inaccessible
roads providing a natural barrier to unwanted visitors, its climate and
soil supplying 42 percent of the opium poppy used in Mexican heroin—and
thus is territory perpetually in dispute between rival traffickers. Even
so, the violence in the area this month has been a “settling of scores”
on an extraordinary scale.
The gruesome portrait of the mother executed with her two children
that turned into a disturbing meme on Facebook came from a massacre on
Nov. 4 in Tetitlán de las Limas. The victims are the sister, nephew, and
niece of an ex-police chief in Chilapa. The police chief went into
hiding last year after Mexican security forces relieved him of his
command and disbanded the municipal police force. Six of his relatives
were murdered in a span of two days, Nov. 2 and 3, including a son of
his, age 27.
On Nov. 4, gunmen murdered another local law-enforcement official,
the sheriff of Polixtepec and his secretary. The lawmen were ambushed
while driving along a dirt road to the village of Puentecillas. In a
separate incident, gunmen massacred 12 people, including two minors, at a
clandestine cockfighting event in Cuajinicuilapa, three hours down the
coast from Acapulco. The state prosecutor Miguel Angel Godínez Muñoz
reported that the gunmen were hunting for a rival capo.
The increase in violence has brought to a head the conflict between
the military and the civilian inhabitants of the interior. The civilians
have long criticized the Mexican Army’s inaction before the threats of
organized crime in the area. The existence of civilian armed
self-defense guards is an admission that a security vacuum exists—a
vacuum that municipal, state, and federal law-enforcement authorities
combined have been unable to fill.
On Nov. 13, the situation came to a head. An Army patrol of 200 men
was halted in the village of Carrizal de Bravo by a crowd of about a
thousand villagers from the municipalities of Leonardo Bravo and General
Heliodoro Castillo. The villagers had sent for the Army nine days prior
when the sheriff and his secretary were murdered. In the intervening
days, with no sign of the Army, the self-defense guards took matters
into their own hands, with a hundred of them engaging local gunmen in a
battle in the village of Polixtepec that lasted several hours and left
three cartel members dead and six in the self-defense guard wounded.
When a patrol from the Army’s 35th
Zona Militar finally did arrive in the area, the soldiers disarmed and
arrested members of the self-defense guard and did not pursue the
members of the drug gang. Shortly thereafter, when the crowd of a
thousand intercepted the Army patrol, the soldiers agreed to release the
several dozen men in custody and return the firearms that they had
confiscated.
Near the end of the hours-long negotiations with the soldiers, the
villagers received word that the drug gang had attacked self-defense
members near the village of El Naranjo. The civilian residents pleaded
with the soldiers to return and investigate the report, but they did
not. The Mexican Marines later sent men into the area; they did not
confirm any body count but did find incinerated vehicles amid numerous
other signs that an armed confrontation had taken place.
Local
reporters interviewed Benito Bello Meneses, a leader in the self-defense
guard who was caught in the firefight. Bello said the gunmen attacked
after the Army had disarmed the self-defense guards, depleting the
strength of the force right as its enemies were staging a counterattack.
The actions by the Army, he said, amounted to collusion with the drug
gang: “Our compañeros were handed over to the killers by the soldiers, the same thing that happened with the students from Ayotzinapa,” he said.
Members of the self-defense movement in the Sierra region say that
Governor Astudillo is being selective about how the state implements his
pledge of order and peace. On one hand, the Army has absented itself
from the violent clashes in the Sierra, while on the other a strike
force of a reported 500 state and federal police officers attacked a
caravan of 150 student activists on Nov. 11.
And, yes, the
students were from the Aytozinapa rural teachers college. They were
traveling in eight intercity buses. Reporters at the scene say the
police stopped the buses at a roadblock on the highway, broke out the
bus windows and fired tear gas inside.
The police prevented the
students from commandeering a diesel fuel truck which they intended to
use for a protest caravan destined for the Nov. 26 global day of action
for the disappeared 43 students from Ayotzinapa. Thirteen students were
arrested and later released; 20 were injured, at least a dozen were
hospitalized.
The Ayotzinapa students accused the government of
ordering the attacks as part of a strategy to quarantine social activism
in the state. Felipe Flores Velázquez, a student spokesman,
characterized the attack as an act of persecution and criticized
Governor Astudillo for deploying the police against students at a time
when drug-related violence is rampant throughout the state.
The
area near the town of Tixtla where the students were attacked will host a
special election for mayor on Nov. 29. At the regular elections in
June, residents of Tixtla set fire to ballot boxes in protest against
the government’s inaction in the disappearances of the 43 students.
Those poor people.Is there no end for their misery?No win situation,damned if they do,damned if they don't..
ReplyDeleteI never trusted ppl from guerrero they will betray their own family members for money not all but most insane how even there wars on this ppl with they're neighbors this ppl don't wat being humble is . Chihuahua was most dangerous bc of border territory but this ppl are the most envious let them kill each other I just feel sad for the innocents
ReplyDelete-saludos desde Guanajuato Donde se respecta
soo agree woth you man
Delete6:04 it is not people from guerrero, güey cabeza de mierda...
DeleteIt is the government of the state of Guerrero and their police, military, paramilitary, their drug dealing compadres, the different gangs the government sponsors, "and all the rest"...
You do not just blame "the people of the state" like a pendejo.
Primero respeten a las burras y chivitas que se andan pisando por los cerros y luego comentas aqui en BB compa.
DeleteDesde Chiraq .
11:25 must be from Guerrero lol
DeleteRespeta a las gallinas y becerras que te llevas a pastorear primero zerote.
DeleteThe government is like that every where they don't force to pull the trigger retard .. So yur telling me the goverment cops or w.e are like Yu know wat everyone today go kill innocent ppl we want this to become a record ? So la cabeza d mierda here is you . or why ain't that bad everywhere then?
Delete11:25 AM & 1:19 PM, there's only one shithead, a dead Paisa called Pauly. That said, 11:25 AM, I totally agree on your take,It is the government of the state of Guerrero and their police, military, paramilitary, their drug dealing compadres, the different gangs the governmen."
DeleteAt one time Communist revolutionaries would've flooded into these areas and defended the people...or at least attempted this.
ReplyDeleteThis is the dark side of capitalism!
Dark side of Capitalism? The absence of Communist rebels is irrelevant. Anyway they would be fighting with and/or for the cartels as we have seen.
DeleteMexico needs a revolution but the communist model is out-of-date.
DeleteLook up the Rojava Revolution on Wikipedia or elsewhere. That's the model Mexico needs. Build comunitario and auto-defensa groups across the country. Build prominent roles for women, including in auto-defensa groups. Build universities and educate the people, not just socially and politically but also in terms of technology and science, so the country can compete globally. Legalize marijuana and poppy and fight to make sure that the profits stay with the peasant communities that grow it primarily, and the national educational/welfare/health/military structure otherwise. Narcos who don't kidnap/extort/harm the public can be legitimized.
Any nacionalistas out there??
2:13am
DeleteBS
5:41 and a rat trap...
Delete2:13 when the peoples are being chased all over, the normalistas exterminated or just disappeared, and there is no peace or jobs and all the corruption emanates from those who hold on to power with the blessing of the US and the UN and the EU...
--what are the chances for your UTOPIA?
This is part of the reason Mexico is in the shape it is,clowns like this are not in the minority.
DeleteMexicans have a terrible insular outlook on so called 'foreigners' and their countries..
They dont learn and never will.The worst ones are ex-pats like DD who become half assed experts on everything Mexican,,like an ex-smoker,basically an asshole,who blame all the ills of Mexico on historical bullshit ? Whatever
This comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteTrue in guerrero if u dont have food on the table your own Brother will kill you for food scraps leftover sad.savages plain n simple. Little 5 ft punks dont play in high school i got whooped by a guerrero an im from guanijuato where life dont cost a thing. (vida no vale nada)
ReplyDeleteThey might be short and dark but don't trust them lol
DeleteIs there a fund for ayotzinapa students or school?
ReplyDeleteThey deserve better than depending on that criminal government, be it pri, pan or prd, they are all working together, but the foreign corporations boss the government around, remember GEORGE SOROS PAID FOR THE APPEALS OF THE ACTEAL CHENALHÓ.BUTCHERS OF ZEDILLO AND CHUAYFFET IN PRISON. AND THAT GEORGE SOROS LOOSES HIS GOLD, NOT JUST THE "CANADIAN MINERAS"...
Thank you BB !
ReplyDeleteexcellent work , I have been following various segments of this story for awhile.
Heartbreaking .
PAZ y AMOR
Hard to believe in this rather long article the words "gold," "mine" or "mining" are not mentioned.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteOnly reason Mexican atrocities don't get coverage is because reports out there get killed or kidnapped for doing there job.
ReplyDelete'my first reaction was why don't the mass murders in Mexico get the same attention and news overage'
ReplyDeleteTypical knee jerk reaction from DD..
It was an organized terrorist attack on wholly innocent people ? Mass murders in Mexico are committed by Mexicans..
2:50 or DD, most mass murders in mexico are committed by mexican government assets, all financed by US and their global vulture capitalist associates, still trying to make voodoo economics of Reagan and the vulture capitalism of "hw", "w" and mitt romney work...the more it does not work, the more they push their luck.
Delete--i would never blame all the american people for the dirty deeds of the hypocrites that have hijacked the US government to make money they do not even need...
--if you were half the man you think you are, you'd be apologizing to the "mexicans" DD you like to slip a turd once in a while, and hope we think it is a report, right?
--Mexico's News blackouts do not allow reporting as it should be
These AD are trying to defend themselves but the stupid government hinders them instead of helping these poor communities. There are many comments made on BB, that the Mexican people do not stand up for them selves; that they are all sheep. How can they defend themselves when the military comes in and disarms the already poorly equipped ADs.
ReplyDeleteIf only Arturo Beltran was still alive , he had control.
ReplyDeleteWhile, this is a valid story, it is mainstream and published in English to begin with. I have been following BB since 2010, support this blog's mission, and respect the 4 lives that paid the highest price of all for contributing to BB. As BB loses its legitimate edge, I am losing the respect I once held for BB as a publication.
ReplyDeleteIf this is the best story the reporter could find, it does not matter what is the original language, specially when there is the spanish news blackouts everywhere, mister "losing respect".
DeleteOne guy or his fuck-ups are not what BB is all about, we are watchin' and we can comment...
Delete--Keep the faith
@6:04 People that want an education, health care, just pay for their work, and oppose their oppressors, including the government that imprison and steal from them their very living and selectively murder or buy their representants they themselves elected...
ReplyDelete--Are they communist?
--Or traitors to a mexico whose government betrayed, robbed, murdered and sent the army, the police or their sicarios to kill them first?
--Funny how some pendejos have no idea about their own pendejismo...
Say WHAT ? what is the problem with publishing something from an english language publication? I personally dont read that one , but maybe if more of these things were published in every language these poor peoples issues might get some attention ! Isnt that a big part of BBs mission......to deseminate info around the world? what , this isnt UNDERGROUND enough already?
ReplyDeleteAcapulco approximately 680k residents with 754 murders.
ReplyDeleteChicago approximately 2.7 million residents with 475 murders.
Which city is more dangerous? You do the math.
Well, chicago does not have tens of thousands of "soldiers" AND DRUG TRAFFICKERS helping the poolice fack up the citizens for the narco-government of the city of chicago, specially not mixed by the hundreds with the CHICAGO POLICE...
DeleteMad Max Thunderdome
ReplyDelete