Pubdate: Thu, 11 Feb 2010 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 2010 Houston Chronicle Publishing Company Division, Hearst Newspaper Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/198 Author: Dudley Althaus, Houston Chronicle Bookmark: http://mapinc.org/topic/Juarez Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Felipe+Calderon Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Mexico CALDERON HEADS TO JUAREZ IN TRIP OF REASSURANCE MEXICO CITY -- Though they represented just a fraction of the thousands of people killed by gangland violence in Mexico, the murders of 12 teenage students in Ciudad Juarez is igniting calls for an overhaul of the drug-war crackdown on which President Felipe Calderon has staked his presidency. "It really captured a lot of people's attention in a way that the literally tens of thousands of other killings have not," said political scientist David Shirk, who specializes in Mexico's drug war at the University of San Diego. "The impression of a lot of Mexicans is that things are getting worse because of what the government is doing, not despite it." Calderon is scheduled to fly to Juarez today as a sign of his commitment to setting things right in the city of more than 1.3 million bordering El Paso. He's expected to announce funding for parks, jobs programs and other projects aimed at reducing the poverty and despair anchoring the violence. "The visit itself, his presence, is the most important thing," said Lucinda Vargas, whose Juarez organization has struggled to find ways to end the killing. "They can't solve problem from Mexico City, or with an occasional statement of support." Caldron promised Wednesday to pacify Juarez's concerns but also to keep pursuing Mexico's narcotics smuggling gangsters with federal troops and police. Fifteen people, 12 of them teenage students and athletes, were massacred at a party in a poor neighborhood Jan. 31. Police arrested a man who confessed to taking part in the killing, saying it was the result of feud between two Juarez gangs. Some survivors of the attack have publicly blamed Calderon's strategy, which put nearly 10,000 federal troops on Juarez's streets. Even with the troops, violence has spiked, with Juarez accounting for a quarter of Mexico's nearly 17,000 gangland killings over two years. "The soldiers come and just drive around. Everything stays the same," said Luz Davila, whose two teenage boys died in the massacre. "When I see them actually do something, I might believe." Many commentators, opposition politicians and security experts have called on Calderon to come up with a new strategy for taking on the gangs. "Contrary to what some think, this violence and feuding wouldn't end with the pullback of federal forces," Calderon said Wednesday. "Retreat would leave the citizenry totally abandoned and in the bloody hands of the criminals." Nationwide, public support for Calderon and his anti-crime efforts has remained strong. But the slaughter of working class students -- who authorities said had no apparent connection to Juarez's criminal gangs - -- has shocked even the most complacent. "Somebody called it Mexico's rock bottom moment. I hope that's true," Shirk said. "But Mexico's had many rock bottom moments. And things keep getting worse." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake