Pubdate: Mon, 24 Apr 2006
Source: Toronto Star (CN ON)
Copyright: 2006 The Toronto Star
Contact:  http://www.thestar.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/456
Author: Oakland Ross, Feature Writer

BORDER NO BARRIER TO WEAPONRY

Most Illegal Firearms Traced To U.S.

Drug Industry Fuelling Rising Demand

TIJUANA, Mexico--It was another deadly day in this  lively border
town, a day of drugs, delinquents and  guns.

Before the day was out, four male denizens of the  community had been
murdered, execution-style, three of  them by gunshots to the head. The
fourth man was  strangled. During the same day, a fifth man was killed
  in what was later described as a shoot-out with local  police. That
was on Feb.8.

"Incontenible ola de crimenes!" exclaimed the headline  in the next
day's issue of El Sol de Tijuana.  "Uncontainable crime wave!"

The carnage was news, certainly, but it wasn't exactly  new, not in
light of the explosive growth in recent  years of the illicit drug
trade along the Mexico-U.S.  border.

Narcotics traffickers have an insatiable appetite for
weapons.

Last year, federal police in the Mexican state of Baja  California,
which contains Tijuana, captured more than  1,100 illicit weapons, and
the overwhelming majority of  them -- 95 per cent by a common estimate
- -- will turn  out to have been smuggled into the country from the
United States.

"It's a very large number," says Franceska Perot of the  Houston Field
Office of the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol,  Tobacco and Firearms. "If you
add it all up, it's a lot  of weapons."

In Toronto, it is widely accepted -- and a source of  keen alarm --
that roughly half the heat packed by  local hoodlums originated
somewhere in the United  States, a land where it is notoriously easy
to acquire  things that go bang in the night.

No matter how stringently they are framed, one  country's gun-control
laws cannot provide protection  against weapons acquired in another
land, then smuggled  across a border.

Lately, Canadians have been taking this lesson to  heart, sometimes
literally, but it's one that Mexico  has been grappling with for years.

In Mexico, it is extremely difficult for civilians to  acquire
firearms legally. Ownership permits are  prohibitively expensive, they
are issued only by the  defence ministry, and they involve intrusive
background  checks that can easily take a year to complete. Even
then, no civilian may legally own more than four guns,  and none of
them may be heavier than .38 calibre.

You might think that these and other restrictions would  keep the
gunplay down to a dull roar, but they don't.  Instead, Mexico fairly
bellows with the discharge of  weaponry.

Each year, police in Mexico recover upwards of 5,000  illegal weapons
or more. They duly record the serial  numbers, report them to U.S.
authorities -- and guess  what.

"The bulk of the guns that we trace are U.S.-sourced  weapons," says a
U.S. law-enforcement agent in Mexico  City, who declined to be
identified by name or  organization.

The problem he describes is bad, and fast getting
worse.

"Before, we were seeing pistols," says the same agent.  "Now we're
seeing a lot more of the high-calibre  assault weapons."

He means automatic rifles such as M-16s and AK-47s.

Even more popular -- because they are cheaper and  easier to acquire
- -- are AR-15s, the semi-automatic  version of the U.S.-made M-16.

The cross-border traffic in firearms between the U.S.  and Mexico is
not really difficult to understand -- an  inevitable consequence of
geography and of very  different approaches to the commercialization
of  weaponry.

"It's near impossible to get a gun licence in Mexico,"  says Perot.
"It's very expensive, and you have to  purchase through the military."

But U.S. authorities impose comparatively few  restrictions on firearm
ownership -- and among the most  lenient jurisdictions of all are
states such as  Arizona, New Mexico and Texas, conveniently located on
  the Mexican border.

Meanwhile, Mexico's booming trade in illicit drugs --  mostly cocaine
and marijuana bound for the U.S. market  -- has created a powerful and
growing demand both for  bullets and for things to shoot them with.

"A large percentage of the guns are going to drug  traffickers," says
Perot. "They need the guns for their  protection."

Drugs are a mean business at the best of times, but in  Mexico the
flames of narcotics-related violence have  been fanned by a
U.S.-endorsed policy of hunting down  and arresting the leaders of the
welter of drug cartels  operating in the country.

"The Mexicans have had success in knocking off some of  the kingpins,
which leads to a power vacuum, which  results in violence," says
Jeffrey Davidow, a former  U.S. ambassador to Mexico.

The troubles are concentrated in northern Mexican  border towns such
as Tijuana, Ciudad Juarez, Nuevo  Laredo and Matamoros, where
in-fighting among drug  dealers has produced shocking levels of
lawlessness.

Thankfully, there can be few places on earth where  people deem it
necessary to coin a term for a man who  turns up dead in the trunk of
an abandoned car. But,  here in Tijuana, such an individual is known
as an  encajuelado -- literally, a "trunked one."

"Every day, you have two or three encajuelados," says  Jorge
Santibanez, president of a prestigious private  university in Tijuana,
el Colegio de la Frontera del  Norte. He is exaggerating, but not by
much. "This has  become an extremely dangerous place."

But the dangers are deceptive.

"If you look strictly at the murder rate in Tijuana, it  can be very
alarming," says Liza Davis, a spokeswoman  at the U.S. Consulate here.
"It was close to 400 dead  last year."

Most of the killings are contained within a shadowy  demimonde of
crooks and thugs, so that law-abiding folk  can still stroll
unmolested around Tijuana and other  border towns by day, oblivious to
the hazards -- unless  they get unlucky.

Or happen to be journalists.

On Feb.5, for example, unidentified gunmen strode into  the editorial
offices of El Manana, the largest  newspaper in Nuevo Laredo, where
they detonated a  fragmentation grenade and sprayed more than 100
rounds  of automatic weapon fire through the newsroom, gravely
wounding reporter Jaime Orozco Tey, before escaping.

The attack was by no means the first assault on  reporters in the
troubled border region in recent years  and is being interpreted by
Mexican journalists as a  general warning not to delve too deeply into
stories  about drugs, payola or guns.

Most of the weapons that wind up in Mexico are obtained  through
so-called "straw purchases" in the United  States -- U.S. residents
buying firearms through legal  channels and then reselling them on the
black market.

It's unlikely that many of the weapons destined for the  Mexican
market originate in California, because the  Golden State imposes some
pretty strict controls on gun  purchases.

In Texas, however, it is a straightforward matter to  buy handguns --
in quantity -- and it is also legal for  civilians to acquire
semi-automatic rifles. All you  have to do is get the guns to Mexico
- -- and that  doesn't seem to be a problem at all.

"It's tough," admits the U.S. law-enforcement agent in  Mexico City.
"It's a challenge for both countries."
- ---
MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPF Florida)