Pubdate: Sat, 27 Aug 2005 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 2005 Houston Chronicle Publishing Company Division, Hearst Newspaper Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/198 Newspaper Author: Dudley Althaus Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Nuevo Laredo WEARIED RESIDENTS APPEALING FOR PEACE Unlike Effort In Monterrey, Border City's Movement Fails To Curb Violence NUEVO LAREDO, MEXICO - White doves of peace have been appearing across this border city since spring, pale symbols of the fragile hope that residents' resolve can succeed where government force has failed in ending a gangland war. Emblazoned on flags, bumper stickers and storefront posters as the most visible sign of a budding citizens movement, the doves carry the simple message that the struggle for calm in Nuevo Laredo is worth the trouble. "The idea is to create a consciousness in society that we have to demand security," said Carlos Martinez, principal of a private high school and a founder of the movement. "How? That's what we're asking ourselves," he said. "The only formula that we've found is to broadcast messages of peace." In addition to distributing the doves, Martinez and others - business executives, teachers, clerics and assorted community activists - have organized marches, written politicians and gone on radio and television calling for nonviolence in a city that has become notorious for drug-gang warfare. Like the organizers of other Mexican civic movements against crime, the Nuevo Laredo activists have had little success so far in stemming the violence that has left nearly 120 people dead here this year. They say they have stitched together their movement as best they can, copying no other. Monterrey Pressures Police The activists, however, perhaps could find a role model in Monterrey, the industrial city 120 miles to the south in neighboring Nuevo Leon state, where officials credit citizens for keeping underworld violence in check by pressuring police. "People here require that the government acts," said Luis Carlos Trevino, attorney general of Nuevo Leon state, noting that all but one of the 26 murders committed statewide in June and July have been solved. Rather than simply hope for peace, citizens across Mexico must denounce suspected mobsters, avoid doing business with them and shun them socially, said Marcelo Garza y Garza, the head of Nuevo Leon's state police investigations unit. Local, state and federal police, he added, must crack down in whatever way they can. "We need everyone to contribute their grain of sand," Garza y Garza said. With about 4 million people, the Monterrey area sees some of the same narcotics-related problems that plague Nuevo Laredo, officials acknowledge. Cocaine and other drugs pass through the region on the way to the United States. Local residents increasingly use drugs themselves. Corruption permeates the police forces. Mobsters live in some of the wealthier neighborhoods. But the gangsters largely have respected an unwritten rule that the area is off-limits to the kind of violence carried out elsewhere, officials say. Law enforcement officials credit pressure from business leaders and residents for government actions that make sure the rule is upheld. After a three-month investigation aided by U.S. agents and tips from residents, state police earlier this month arrested 19 suspected gangland gunmen in a Monterrey restaurant. The detainees included at least a half-dozen former and current state police detectives who are accused of belonging to a gang active in Nuevo Laredo. Two of them - brothers-in-law Jose Luis Carrizales and Jose Guadalupe Guzman from Laredo - were wanted in connection with the May gangland-style killing of a pair of men at a popular family restaurant in Monterrey's most fashionable suburb. But effective citizen pressure remains the exception in Mexico. In more than seven decades of one-party, authoritarian rule that ended with President Vicente Fox's election in 2000, many Mexicans came to expect solutions from the central government, not local officials or themselves, some analysts say. "People here haven't understood that by being organized they can more effectively pressure the government," said Sigrid Arzt, of Democracy, Human Rights and Security, a Mexico City think tank. At least 250,000 people marched last summer in Mexico City to protest a wave of kidnappings and other crimes. The protest brought government promises of a crackdown and several weeks of additional police checkpoints but, seemingly, not much else. Nuevo Laredo has been on the front line of Mexico's narcotics wars for more than two years, with rival gangs battling to dominate smuggling routes into Texas and beyond. Killings On The Rise Through the long months of escalating bloodshed, many Mexicans shrugged off the violence as a media exaggeration, a fight that didn't concern them or an evil hoisted upon them by American narcotics consumers. But that was before the June assassination of Nuevo Laredo's police chief, a July gun battle involving rocket-propelled grenades and the August killing of a city councilman. The city has become the focal point of a nationwide crackdown on gangland violence, dubbed Operation Secure Mexico. Nonetheless, Nuevo Laredo's murder rate accelerated this summer despite the presence of 1,200 federal paramilitary police, 460 municipal police and several hundred troops. Some people are moving out. Others have hunkered down, waiting for the plague to pass. But a growing few are speaking up, however quietly, however ineffectively so far. "We are responsible for the city in which we live," said Ninfa Cantu, a director of El Manana, Nuevo Laredo's leading newspaper, which has become involved in the peace movement. "What you can't do is simply cross your arms when this is affecting the community where your children live. At least we can sleep well at night, knowing we are doing something." - --- MAP posted-by: Elizabeth Wehrman