Soldiers patrol a neighborhood in Irapuato, Guanajuato state, Mexico, during COVID-19 pandemic |
MEXICO CITY (AP) — For people in Mexican
towns and villages where criminal gangs, armed groups and drug traffickers hold
more sway than the state, the novel coronavirus is just the latest danger. The
threat of death and the inability to move freely are nothing new.
From the northern border to the western sierra to
the Gulf Coast, hundreds of Mexican communities have been under curfew and
quarantine for years. Their residents are unable to move around at night, or
from their town to another under control of a different gang.
Death from a bullet or after disappearance has long
been an ever-present possibility — making the risk of coronavirus seem
abstract, even as the toll grows around Mexico.
“A lot of people don’t believe it, aren’t careful, I think because of what we’ve been through,” said a woman from Tamaulipas, a northern border state long plagued by cartel violence across the Rio Grande from Texas. “They say if 10 years of war haven’t killed us, a virus isn’t going to.”
“A lot of people don’t believe it, aren’t careful, I think because of what we’ve been through,” said a woman from Tamaulipas, a northern border state long plagued by cartel violence across the Rio Grande from Texas. “They say if 10 years of war haven’t killed us, a virus isn’t going to.”
She spoke on condition of anonymity because in
Ciudad Miguel Aleman, the border town where she lives, it’s dangerous to speak
with journalists even about an epidemic. In Tamaulipas — in big cities with
assembly plants churning out washing machines and flat screen TVs for the U.S.
market, or in remote ranching communities — any home could be a safe house
holding migrants, drugs, guns or cash.
Mexico is headed into the critical moment of the
pandemic with 24,905 confirmed cases and 2,271 known dead, but the violence
hasn’t stopped. The 34,000 murders last year surpassed any year on record. And
last month’s toll of 3,000 homicides was highest for any month since July 2018,
according to official data. Another 61.000 people are missing.
The peace promised by President Andrés Manuel López
Obrador hasn’t arrived, and organized crime runs rampant. People shrug when
asked to take precautions for the coronavirus.
“We’ve been living 10 years in quarantine,” the
woman said. “It’s not hard to stay home anymore.”
Mexican President speaks after visiting facilities at a Mexican Social Security Institute hospital that will be converted to receive patients suffering from Covid-19 |
A humanitarian worker there recently noticed a
street-level drug dealer was wearing a mask, and the local crime group was
giving away food and other necessities. It’s a public relations tactic seen in
various parts of Mexico during the past month to curry favor with locals; among
those handing out relief kits were the daughter of kingpin Joaquin “El Chapo”
Guzman. López Obrador has denounced it, but said it was inevitable.
In the rugged Tarahumara mountains of northern
Chihuahua state, where organized crime controls drugs, the illegal logging
business and most movement, patrolling soldiers advise residents to take
precautions to avoid COVID-19, according to a resident in Sisoguichi. But the
government’s presence has always been perfunctory and fleeting. The criminals
are the authority and they don’t pause or seem much concerned about the health
emergency.
“It can sound really cold, but if we compare the
dead from violence and those from the pandemic, the first are more,” said a
local who declined to be identified, because days earlier a group had entered
the town shooting, killing four and kidnaping two more, one of whom later
turned up dead. “Using a mask and gloves doesn’t protect you from bullets.” The
man doesn’t minimize the virus.
With the nearest medical specialist 300 kilometers
(about 185 miles) away, he can imagine what would happen if the coronavirus
spread through ravines connected by sinuous dirt roads. He’s also worried about
the economic impact.
But he said others are skeptical. “A lot say its rumors to
scare the people, that it’s not going to come there, that it’s made up by the
government,” he said. “There’s a lot of disbelief.” There is a
“desensitization” toward violence for those who live close to death, said
psychotherapist and trauma expert Susana Uribe. “If you already live scared,
how is the virus going to scare you?” But there are signs that some Mexicans
are scared, and are trying to protect themselves.
Nobody knows violence like
residents of the western state of Sinaloa, but unlike those in some other
remote outposts, they also know coronavirus, especially in the capital. The
state saw 92 people succumb to the virus in a month; that same time, 74 were
murdered.
Even as life goes on in working-class neighborhoods of the state
capital Culiacan -- a city where dead drug capos rest in more luxury than most
living residents -- it appears that some in Sinaloa are taking the virus
seriously.
In the rugged Tarahumara mountains where organized crime controls drugs, the illegal logging business and most movement, patrolling soldiers advise residents to take precautions to avoid COVID-19 |
“The drug traffickers, the bosses, are afraid, they’re in their
bunkers fearing infection. They know they can die from it”, said Juan Carlos
Ayala, expert in violence at the Sinaloa Autonomous University. “They are
worried when someone arrives from Culiacán. And of course, the wave of violence
keeps going. They’re killing each other the same as before”.
In the mountains,
the domain of the Sinaloa cartel, a resident said some have stocked up with
essentials to avoid having to travel to Culiacan, and you see fewer. cars on
the highway. Néstor Rubiano, a mental health expert with Doctors without
Borders, said doctors have trouble getting to towns in the mountains of
Guerrero state, and competing criminal groups control access. This is the land
of opium poppy production, with checkpoints manned by rifle-toting narcos.
So,
he said, some residents decided to self-quarantine. “If the virus came and
someone got sick, where would they go? Because the closest hospital is hours
away, that is if they take them,” Rubiano said. “And are they going to be able
to get out? Because if the opposing group is there they’ll kill them en route.”
For people in Mexican towns and villages where criminal gangs, armed groups and drug traffickers hold more sway than the state, the novel coronavirus is just the latest danger. |
Antibacterial gel is plentiful. But none of that matters when shots ring out,
and everyone runs. In these densely forested mountains, the communities are
primarily indigenous, but there is a heavy paramilitary presence involved in
land disputes.
When entire communities are forced to flee their land, they hide
in the forest, sleeping under tarps until the situation calms and they can
return. There have been some 2,000 intermittently displaced people during the
past two years.
Mexican and international organizations have warned of the
vulnerability of these people during the pandemic. Just last week, eight homes
were damaged by gunfire. People are afraid to light cooking fires because the
smoke could draw their pursuers, Lopez explained.
“We’re living under fire and
facing aggression; that’s a bigger concern than coronavirus,” he said.
“Furthermore, the government’s recommendation is to stay at home, but what
home?”
In other words "No Mames Guey"
ReplyDeleteThe national motto of Mexico LOL
DeleteCan only imagine the true estimated numbers of confirmed cases of covid in Mexico.
ReplyDeleteWhile prisoners are literally trying to infect themselves for release in LA. With 30 prisoners infected from a holding cell.
They say Obrador is hiding the true numbers in Mexico City. I am glad not to live in Mexico City.
DeleteAnd to believe AMLO is reopening travel destinations into Cancun for foreigners is unthinkable. Can only imagine the magnitude of infection rates when he does.
ReplyDeleteMexico is well known for lacking security measures for its citizens. Doubt testing sites or kits are even being distributed.
You should see the charts they keep going up in MEXICO, long way to flatten the curve. 160 Lost to CV in one day.
DeleteHas anybody told them that the chances of dying if you are under 70 and without an underlying illness is near to none? Even less for children.
ReplyDeleteLol cartels enforcing social distance, since when are they in charge of that. What azzholes.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.vox.com/2020/5/13/21255012/coronavirus-covid-19-mexico-death-count-cases
ReplyDeleteI agree that it might take more elderly and so on, but all ages still need healthcare, hospital beds, medicines and so on.
ReplyDelete