Pubdate: Sun, 23 Jan 2005 Source: San Antonio Express-News (TX) Copyright: 2005 San Antonio Express-News Contact: http://www.mysanantonio.com/expressnews/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/384 Author: Robert Rivard Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) UNTOUCHABLE DRUG LORDS THREATEN MEXICO'S EMBRACE OF DEMOCRACY Despairing business owners along the border are wringing their hands, watching over shops and stores with few customers. Waiters in the best restaurants stand idle amid empty tables. The week before Christmas, I found myself seated with a friend in Nuevo Laredo's plaza, both of us wondering the same thing: Where were all the Christmas shoppers and the camouflaged hunters who come south to eat and drink? Over the course of the day, we didn't see any. The streets, the market and the restaurants were ours alone. Tourist traffic from Laredo has dwindled to a trickle, while long, snaking lines of vehicles wait to cross from Mexico into the United States. The wait can take hours as Mexicans endure post-Sept. 11 scrutiny that they find hard to understand. The border crossings into Matamoros, Reynosa and Nuevo Laredo are only hours away from San Antonio, and an easy day's drive from Dallas and Houston, but few people are heading south these days. It's easy to see why A rising wave of violence among competing drug traffickers has spilled out of Mexico's prisons and into the streets as the bosses and their henchmen, many drawn from the ranks of Mexican law enforcement, vie for market control. Hardly a day goes by without an official or ex-official turning up dead in a car, alongside a road, their hands often tied behind their backs, their bodies often exhibiting signs of torture. I walked from the quiet plaza back across the bridge to my hotel in Laredo, and awoke the next morning to this lead headline in the Express-News: "Americans are disappearing in Nuevo Laredo; 21 are known to have vanished; U.S. Consulate issues a warning." Of course, many more Mexicans have fallen victim, most of them involved in the drug trade, but others caught in the crossfire. That's why a good table is so easy to get al otro lado, on the other side, right now. Last week's headlines focused on six jailers executed in Matamoros. The week before, the headlines focused on the execution-style murder of a Mexico City inmate whose brother, El Chapo Guzman, is one of the country's major drug lords and, himself a prison escapee, also the most wanted man in Mexico. Guzman bribed his Guadalajara jailers and escaped in a truckload of dirty laundry. He is still on the loose, while his former jailers remain behind bars. The director of the Mexico City prison and his key deputies, also on the take, were implicated in the latest killing. The administration of President Vicente Fox sent in loyal army troops backed by tanks and helicopters to wrest control of the prison from corrupt guards and the inmates. Dispersing some of the warring drug kingpins from Mexico City to the Matamoros facility was part of the government's strategy. The slain jailers are reminders that the traffickers act with seeming impunity, despite get-tough pronouncements from the administration. The illicit heroin and cocaine trade, driven by demand on our side of the border, generates extraordinary amounts of cash, measured in the billions. The corruption that kind of money fuels makes it all but impossible to tell the good guys from the bad guys. Law enforcement personnel, who are in their jobs to protect citizens, are actually protecting the dealers and their loads. Privately, top Mexican and U.S. officials know exactly how bad it is. Officials in the Bush administration assume that at virtually every level of state and local government in Mexico, there are people in the pay of drug lords. Publicly, little is said, except for the occasional citizen advisory and the merchants and chamber of commerce types who are left to complain about intensifying newspaper coverage. Jesse Bogan, this newspaper's correspondent based in Laredo, just returned from Matamoros, several hours down the Rio Grande, where the six guards were executed in cold blood. Bogan, along with his counterpart in Mexico City, Dane Schiller, filed a story last week that quoted a statement issued by the ministry of safety: "No criminal is more powerful than the state — the federal government has the resources to stop them." "War was declared a long time ago," Attorney General Rafael Macedo de la Concha said. Mexico watchers and all who live near the border are watching with a skeptical eye to see whether the Mexican government is resolute enough to shut down the narcotraficantes. The outcome could prove to be a far more telling indicator of Mexico's future as a democracy than anything said or done in the coming presidential campaign and election to choose Fox's successor. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth