Pubdate: Tue, 30 Mar 2010 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Copyright: 2010 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.wsj.com/ Author: Nicholas Casey Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Mexico KILLINGS TAKE DRUG WAR TO MEXICO ELITE Student Deaths at Prestigious School Lead Wealthy to Criticize Military Tactics; Victims 'Were the Hope for Our Future' MEXICO CITY-When shooting broke out between army soldiers and drug traffickers at Mexico's most prestigious university on March 19, two people were left dead and an entire campus was in shock. The bodies, authorities said, belonged to two hit men. Then came another shock: Javier Arredondo and Jorge Antonio Mercado weren't assassins, but two graduate students caught in the crossfire at the Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education. The Attorney General's office said the original account was wrong, and blamed the army for the misinformation. The army hasn't commented on the account. The killings have brought the country's bloody drug war close to home for Mexico's middle and upper class, which have remained at a distance from the daily turf battles between rival cartels. Now the elites are joining poorer Mexicans in questioning the use of lethal military force to fight drug cartels in their cities, and whether the army could be killing more innocent victims than it claims. The deaths have ignited a storm in Mexico. Monterrey Tech's rector said the army had attempted a cover-up to avoid the embarrassment of having killed innocent civilians. Students began protests while newspapers fired off angry editorials calling the event a "student massacre." The shootings were the second high-profile incident from Mexico's drugs war in as many weeks. Earlier this month, three people related to the U.S. consulate in Ciudad Juarez were gunned down. Officials said on Monday they had arrested a suspect in the killings of consulate employee Lesley Enriquez and her husband, Arthur Redelfs, both Americans. A similar scenario to the Monterrey Tech shootings occurred in February in Ciudad Juarez after 15 teenaged students were slaughtered by hit men at a party. President Felipe Calderon at first described the incident as a "settling of accounts" between gangs, suggesting the teens were members of a drug cartel. He was later forced to backtrack when it became apparent the teens were targeted by mistake. In the case of the Monterrey Tech shootings, authorities changed their original stance that the two were criminals only when the mother of one of the victims identified the body and the university's Rector Rafael Rangel Sostmann called the press to set the record straight. "Who can Mexicans trust? How many deaths of innocents are necessary to change the direction of our authorities and make them more effective?" asked Claudia Flores, a childhood friend of Mr. Arredondo. The military has rejected claims of wrongdoing in the Monterrey deaths, which are under investigation by the government. Last week, Gen. Guillermo Moreno Serrano, the army's regional commander, told the Reforma daily: "We aren't assassins." On Monday, a military spokeswoman declined further comment pending the government's inquiry on the incident. Monterrey, a wealthy industrial city near the U.S. border, is the home of much of the country's English-speaking business elite. Monterrey Tech-Mexico's Harvard or MIT-is the training ground of this country's ruling class, many of whom graduate into jobs at the nation's biggest companies, many of which are also based in Monterrey. Carlos Gabuardi, an international corporate lawyer who teaches in the university's law department and has a son attending the school, wrote in his blog that the deaths were "absurd and unjustified" and described Monterrey as his "beloved city made sick by the violence" of the drug war. "I hope this can become a turning point for how things happen in Mexico," he said in an interview. Authorities say they're still trying to reconstruct the series of events on March 19. Shortly after midnight, military men were chasing suspected drug traffickers who fled to the grounds of the university, where a firefight erupted, authorities have said. Around that time, Messrs. Arredondo and Mercado were exiting a campus building after work, likely heading back to their residences. It is unclear whose weapons killed the men. According to the university, Mr. Mercado's injuries appeared to have been caused by a grenade. Grenades aren't typically used by the military in confrontations but are often used by drug cartels. Mr. Arredondo appears to have died of bullet wounds. Since President Calderon took office in late 2006, more than 18,000 people have been killed in drug-related violence. The government says some 90% of victims are cartel members killed by rival drug gangs, and that the rest of the victims are mostly police and army officials. It says very few innocent civilians have been killed. Many of these killings have occurred in poor and lawless corners of Mexico, where witnesses have less leverage to speak out, say human-rights advocates. "The usual practice is to call everybody who ends up getting killed in shootouts with security forces 'gang members.' Most of them are. Some of them are not," says Jose Miguel Vivanco, who directs investigations in Latin America for advocacy group Human Rights Watch. Mr. Vivanco points to the Monterrey Tech incident as further evidence of the lack of accountability in Mexico's army.Victims of military abuse have few avenues to ensure their cases are fairly heard, because human rights complaints are handled by military tribunals with little incentive to convict, says Jose Miguel Vivanco, who directs investigations in Latin America for advocacy group Human Rights Watch. After a request by Mr. Vivanco's office, the military provided only one successful conviction in a human-rights case in these tribunals. Military officials didn't respond to a written request on this case, or other convictions. "The war is conducted with virtual carte blanche," said Mr. Vivanco. "We're talking about an army that's not accountable for its actions." The two families in Monterrey remain in grief, seeking answers for what occurred. Mr. Arredondo's cousin says he talked to his deceased cousin a week and a half before the incident. Mr. Arredondo was going to graduate in May, with a doctorate at age 24, recalls his cousin, Juan Carlos Arredondo, who is acting a spokesman for the family. "With all this killing in the drug war, it was these kinds of people we needed most-they were the hope for our future." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake