Pubdate: Sun, 27 Dec 2009 Source: El Paso Times (TX) Copyright: 2009 El Paso Times Contact: http://www.elpasotimes.com/formnewsroom Website: http://www.elpasotimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/829 Author: Ramon Bracamontes, El Paso Times Bookmark: http://mapinc.org/topic/Juarez Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Felipe+Calderon NO QUICK FIX SEEN FOR DRUG BATTLE IN JUAREZ The Juarez of old is gone. In its place is a paralyzing and vicious 2-year-old drug war that has the 1.5 million residents in the manufacturing border town living in fear, even as city leaders pledge to never give in to the powerful cartels that are using the city's streets as a killing ground. The axis of the problem remains the same: The Sinaloa Cartel and its leader Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman are trying to wrest control of the Juarez drug-trafficking corridor from the Juarez Cartel and its leader, Vicente Carrillo Fuentes. Neither side has been able to defeat the other after two years. As a result, Juarez has gone from a popular tourist attraction to the murder capital of North America. Juarez had more than 1,600 murders in 2008 and 2,580 this year. That translates to 165 deaths in Juarez per 100,000 residents. In Baghdad, there are 48 deaths per 100,000 residents. One expert on Mexico said the violence may not ease for some time, as both cartels are entrenched and neither is backing down. "Inasmuch as neither organization can completely exterminate the other, the carnage is likely to continue for a while," said Tony Payan, a University of Texas at El Paso professor, whose expertise is Mexico. "Nobody really knows how long, but it is likely to continue." Two years ago, when the cartels declared war, the grand prize was the Juarez Plaza. Each saw control of the plaza as an exclusive right to ship drugs into the United States through El Paso and Juarez. For ordinary residents in Juarez, those trying to make an honest living and have safe neighborhoods, the stakes are greater. The cartels are fighting for heroin sales on Juarez's streets, and competing to shake down businesses through extortion. No one knows exactly how lucrative these new endeavors are, but U.S. officials estimate that Juarez has tens of thousands of drug addicts. The extortion racket, which includes kidnappings, has caused more than 6,000 businesses in Juarez to shut down, including most of the tourist shops in the mercados. Several restaurants on Avenida Juarez have also closed. The town, at night, is basically empty, as neither tourists nor natives dine out. The street mariachis, who used to roam the sidewalks, are gone. "Right now, the big problem we have are extortions," Juarez Mayor Jose Reyes Ferriz said. "We're getting a task force ready to work on that. I'm sure we will be able to lower that crime rate, as well as the homicide rate." Genesis of a Drug War Juarez's troubles publicly surfaced in January 2008, but the war was actually triggered 13 months earlier when Mexican President Felipe Calderon took office. Calderon did not like the direction his country was headed. The cartels, he has said, were a national security problem. He ordered the Mexican army to disband them. Calderon's targets included the Juarez cartel, which had controlled Juarez's drug trade since the early 1990s. As the Juarez cartel faced off with the military, Guzman and the Sinaloa cartel tried to move in. Guzman recruited two Mexican street gangs -- the Artistic Assassins and the Mexicles -- to try to bury the Juarez cartel. The Sinaloa cartel began attacking Juarez cartel members in 2008. Various U.S. and Juarez officials expected the street violence to end within three months. Instead, it raged on as police officers and cartel members were executed and tortured. Innocent people on occasion also have been killed in the gangland fighting. This year, when it became apparent the violence would not end, Calderon sent 7,000 soldiers and 2,000 federal police officers to Juarez. The military took over the municipal police department, as well as most of the day-to-day law enforcement operations. The killings stopped for about three weeks in March, a lull before an explosion. The violence resumed in April, this time in greater numbers. Kidnappings, bank robberies, carjackings and extortions escalated. Many saw this as a failing of government. "We thought they had a solid strategy and some intelligence on the cartels. What we found out is that they didn't have a strategic plan," said Juarez businessman Gabriel Cantu. In November this year, Cantu and several hundred other business owners formed the group, "Juarenses por la Paz," or Juarez residents want peace. It hopes to place billboards in El Paso and Juarez that say, "Ya Basta" (Enough). "We are tired of the violence," Cantu said. "The situation is getting worse. And if it isn't stopped, it will affect El Paso. It has affected El Paso, but it will be worse." El Paso's Interests So far, U.S. law enforcement officials say, the cartel violence has spilled into El Paso only twice. In May, Jose Daniel Gonzalez-Galeana of El Paso was shot dead at his home on the East Side. Investigators say his execution was ordered by one of the cartels because Gonzalez-Galeana was an informant for the U.S. government. Three men, including a Fort Bliss soldier, were arrested. Then in September, attackers kidnapped Horizon City resident Sergio Saucedo from his home while his wife and a busload of school children looked on. His mutilated body was a found week later in Juarez. No arrests have been made in that case. Joseph Arabit, special agent in charge of the Drug Enforcement Administration's staff in El Paso, said law enforcement agencies in El Paso continuously monitor crime in West Texas to see whether it is related to the cartel violence. "There are some local drug distribution networks in El Paso, but El Paso is mostly a transportation point," Arabit said. "We are constantly investigating and breaking up the distribution networks on this side, but very little spillover has occurred." He attributes that to the Mexican military's proactive presence in Juarez, which is hurting the cartels. "What we are seeing is that loads being smuggled are getting smaller and smaller. Seizures are down 30 percent, and the purity of the cocaine is going down," Arabit said. Five years ago, drug shipments being caught at the ports of entry in El Paso routinely weighed 300 or 400 kilos. Now the shipments being detected weigh 50 to 75 kilos. Reyes Ferriz and the Mexican army insist that they are slowly turning things around in Juarez. In the past year, more than 5,000 people have been arrested and charged with drug trafficking, weapons violations or both. The army has arrested several gang members, who have confessed to killing more than 1,000 people, Mexican officials said. The fact that the war rages on is testimony to the number of foot soldiers, or street-level gang members, who are involved. "There is a human toll going on over there that we as human beings should be concerned about," said David Cuthbertson, FBI special agent in charge of the El Paso division. Military Presence Continues In September, during his third state of the union address, Calderon reiterated that the fight against the cartels would continue and that the Mexican army would lead the way. Calderon, who is halfway through his six-year term, said the military must remain in charge until all of the local and state police departments are void of corruption. UTEP's Payan said Calderon strategy is to keep hitting the cartels. "He is the first truly conservative president of Mexico in a long time, and thus his orientation is one of law and order," Payan said. "He will continue his struggle. He believes that the price is worth paying." Calderon has shown that he is willing to take on any cartel or criminal organization. Just this month, the Mexican navy got into a firefight with one of Mexico's most powerful drug lords, Arturo Beltran Leyva, and killed him. His death might have implications for Juarez, Payan said. Beltran Leyva was a major enemy of Guzman. Now that Beltran Leyva is gone, there is a chance that Guzman will focus on Carrillo Fuentes and the Juarez cartel. "If that is the case, Ciudad Juarez can get worse before it gets better," Payan said. "It is entirely possible, however, that he will simply take over the Sinaloa-Sonora-Arizona corridor and that he leaves the Carrillo Fuentes organization alone to operate in Ciudad Juarez through some sort of truce. And that may mean a reduction in violence in Ciudad Juarez." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake