Pubdate: Sat, 09 Feb 2008 Source: Monitor, The (McAllen, TX) Copyright: 2008 The Monitor Contact: http://www.themonitor.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1250 Author: James Osborn DRUG WAR MEANS AN EARLY NIGHT IN REYNOSA REYNOSA -- Once mobbed with a mix of American teenagers, roaming mariachis and cowboy hat-clad locals headed to the dance halls, Zona Rosa, the city's nightlife district, is eerily quiet these days. In the early evening, many of the restaurants and bars are shuttered, and those that remain open make do on a smattering of customers, nursing beers quietly in the corner. "After 10 p.m. there's nobody out in the city," Patricia Duran, the manager of Mr. Bomb Bar and Pool, said in Spanish. "The military is everywhere, so people stay home. They don't want to be searched, especially the women." Since Mexican President Felipe Calderon ordered soldiers to the Tamaulipas border last month in an effort to crack down on drug trafficking, Reynosa has taken on the feel of an occupied city. Soldiers are posted at intersections and drive around in armored vehicles topped with .50-caliber machine guns. Each day's raids of the Gulf Cartel and the paramilitary group the Zetas tops that night's news. Now bar and restaurant owners, even proprietors in the city's red-light district Boys Town, are closing their doors at 10 p.m., bringing an end to the city's all-night revelry. The reason for the curfew is a matter of debate. Jeffrey Salcedo Cantu, an official with the city of Reynosa, said no one in the city government, nor any state or federal authorities, has imposed a regulation forcing establishments to close at 10 p.m. He said he believed the business owners had taken the initiative to close to try to avoid being raided by the military -- apparently in search of drug traffickers. Bar managers and owners interviewed for this story said authorities had forced them to close down, though the owners could not specify which agency. Such confusion is not uncommon in Reynosa, a rapidly expanding city where tension between the government and the residents is a facet of life. The bars started closing down early a month ago, about the same time a shoot-out between soldiers and suspected drug traffickers brought the city to a near halt. Since then, what little traffic there was from Americans has all but dried up, said Cesar Martinez, president of the Reynosa Chamber of Commerce and owner of two well known restaurants. "These rumors go around because no one knows what the military is actually doing. No one's giving the information," Martinez said. The effects are already being felt, as revenues in Zona Rosa drop to almost nothing and bar staff make do with reduced hours. "I used to work every day until 4 a.m.," Cerrillo Gamez, a cashier at Imperial Cocktail Lounge, said in Spanish. "I've been working here 35 years and now they just have me working weekends. Things need to change soon because everyone's losing." Outside 1040, a popular nightclub, bouncer Jose Luis Hernandez said he was hopeful the club's young clientele would return for this weekend but admitted that was unlikely. "We never used to get busy until midnight or 1 a.m.," he said. The situation isn't expected to improve until the military loosens its hold over the city and the raids cease, and when that will be is anybody's guess, said Salcedo, the city official. In the meantime, bar owners said they will have to continue calling it a night at 10 p.m. Inside Mr. Bomb on Thursday evening, a group of Reynosa teenagers drank happily and smoked cigarettes as they shot a game of pool. They had recently turned 18, the legal drinking age in Mexico, and had been looking forward to enjoying the city's nightlife. "It's terrible" said Fernando Guillen. "There's nowhere to have fun anymore." __ La Frontera staff writer Marta Leticia Hernandez contributed reporting to this story. _ James Osborne covers McAllen and general assignments for The Monitor - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom