Pubdate: Sun, 7 Mar 2010 Source: El Paso Times (TX) Copyright: 2010 El Paso Times Contact: http://www.elpasotimes.com/formnewsroom Website: http://www.elpasotimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/829 Author: Adriana Gomez Licon Bookmark: http://mapinc.org/topic/Juarez CARING FOR THE DRUG WAR VICTIMS Juarez Physician Helps When Others Refuse JUAREZ -- Dr. Arturo Valenzuela Zorrilla fills a void left by two years of violence committed by warring drug cartels. The secretary of the surgery specialist summons him one day to the General Hospital in the deadliest city in Mexico. Gunmen had hit a man with three bullets, one to the neck and two to the torso. "It happens every day," Valenzuela Zorrilla said. Many times a day, actually. More than 4,600 people have been murdered in Juarez since January 2008. Many more have been wounded. Health care is under siege. Valenzuela Zorrilla is one of the few doctors who take phone calls or drive to hospitals late at night to try to save victims of attacks. Many hospitals now turn down patients with bullet wounds because, in some cases, hit men followed them all the way to the operating rooms to finish the job. Clinics have closed after assaults and extortions have left owners with empty pockets. Doctors have closed their offices for fear of extortions and kidnappings. "The medical profession is a very sensitive one," Valenzuela Zorrilla said. "We are in the epicenter of the situation." From his office window, Valenzuela Zorrilla can see El Paso's Downtown buildings and the Franklin Mountains. In the same office, he takes calls from fellow doctors who go to him for advice on how to deal with extortions and kidnappings. Valenzuela Zorrilla leads the local doctors' committee, which meets to discuss ways to protect its members from organized crime. Recently, Valenzuela Zorrilla organized a workshop for doctors on tactics for negotiating ransoms. He carries a cell phone provided by the committee to take calls from people with questions about public safety. "People don't know how to confront kidnappings, how to negotiate kidnappings. They panic," he said. Then he talks about capitulating to the kidnappers to save a life by paying ransom. "For instance, you can get it down to 10 percent of the first sum demanded," Valenzuela Zorrilla said. He was the first person to publicly speak to Mexican President Felipe Calderon when he visited Juarez last month. Valenzuela Zorrilla criticized Calderon's use of the military to help police Juarez, and what he considered a belated response to the violence. Valenzuela Zorrilla also said the government needs a strategy to solve extortions and kidnappings. "I know that now I'm too exposed," he said. "I am the tipping point. If they kill me, then we know that was the limit." Nobody has extorted or threatened Valenzuela Zorrilla, a single dad raising a 9-year-old girl. She often calls and sends text messages to check on him. Valenzuela Zorrilla said his daughter understands how important it is to be vocal on issues related to violence. "My daughter told me, 'Dad, when you die I will continue to do what you are doing.' With a daughter like that, you can't back out." For decades, countless people in El Paso depended on health-care services across the border. In late 2008, a study by the Paso del Norte Health Foundation found that nearly a third of El Pasoans had used some kind of medical service in Juarez. That same year, dentists in Juarez began losing U.S. patients. Physicians were among the first to protest against organized crime. In December 2008, the doctors' committee was formed. Hundreds of health-care workers covered their faces with sterile masks and gathered at the giant Jua rez flagpole in Chamizal Park. Valenzuela Zorrilla was there. He said the medical profession became vulnerable to the violence throughout the second half of 2008. The threats abated in 2009. Criminal organizations began kidnapping doctors again this year. This prompted one physician, general practitioner Leticia Chava rria, to interrupt one of Calderon's visits to ask the president for measures to better investigate kidnappings and extortions. "My problem is the same all doctors have," she said. "That they look at us as victims easy to kidnap." At least 11 doctors whom the committee knows about have been kidnapped since June 2008. Doctors said family members are afraid to call the police. "There's no report because there's no trust," said Dr. Miguel Garcia, another general practitioner. Garcia estimates that about 200 doctors' offices and seven clinics have closed. Fearing retaliation, he did not want the El Paso Times to publish the name of the clinic he owns. The clinic's gynecologist was recently kidnapped, and Garcia said the criminals confused that doctor with him. In the past two weeks, Mexican authorities have arrested members of two alleged kidnapping rings. Police said one was led by a doctor who targeted other medical professionals. Rene Romeo Ruiseco Salinas, nicknamed "El Doctor," remains a fugitive. Ruiseco Salinas is a 28-year-old general practitioner. On Friday, Mexican authorities arrested Soledad Aldana Rodriguez, known as "La Chole," in connection with Ruiseco Salinas' alleged ring. She is accused of feeding and guarding 15 kidnapping victims until bribes were delivered. One of those victims was a dentist, officials said. Other members of the ring, including El Pasoan Sergio "El Toki" Iglesias, were arrested last weekend. The effects these crimes have had on health care are felt on both sides of the border. The number of people treated in the United States after attacks in Juarez continues to rise. University Medical Center of El Paso treated 83 people shot in Mexico last year, compared with about 50 patients in all of 2008. More than three-quarters of the patients it treated in 2009 were U.S. citizens Members of the doctors' committee against organized crime said they do not see how Calderon will keep a recent promise to extend health coverage to 300,000 people in Juarez. The committee members prefer to see a change in crime-fighting tactics. They want government to cleanse police departments and courts of corruption. Meanwhile, Valenzuela Zor rilla continues to respond to emergencies in the early hours of the morning. He said no other doctor wants to go out when it is dark. "Going out at night is an extreme sport," he said. The surgery specialist has become more alert. He takes different paths to go to the hospital and back home. He tries to vary his schedule to avoid premeditated attacks. Even with all the shootings and people in need of long-term treatment, Valenzuela Zor rilla said, he is not getting much out of it monetarily. "It is not profitable. It is not safe. It is dangerous, so why would you risk being a doctor?" - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake