Pubdate: Sat, 24 Jul 2010 Source: El Paso Times (TX) Copyright: 2010 El Paso Times Contact: http://www.elpasotimes.com/townhall/ci_14227323 Website: http://www.elpasotimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/829 Author: Daniel Borunda CONCERNS IN JUAREZ CLIMB AS BOMBING THREAT GROWS The threat of more deadly car bombings like the one earlier this month has forced Juarez authorities to take measures to protect police stations, and authorities reported finding more explosives in Chihuahua on Wednesday. The car bombing that killed three people apparently was ordered because law-enforcement agencies are perceived to be siding with either the Sinaloa and Juarez drug cartels, which have unleashed a wave of violence in the city that has claimed the lives of nearly 6,000 people since 2008. The July 15 bombing killed a Mexican federal police officer and a paramedic responding to a call about a wounded police officer laying on a sidewalk. The police officer, who also was killed, was a decoy who lured agents to the scene before the blast. The bomb, made from about 22 pounds of Tovex, a water gel explosive commonly used as a replacement for dynamite in mining, was detonated by remote control. Authorities on Wed nesday found 55 pounds of the explosive in the mountains between Chi huahua and Sonora states following a shootout with gunmen. Officials did not say if the explosives were bound for Juarez. In response to the bombing, Juarez officials last week increased security at police stations and prohibited parking next to the buildings. A police spokesman said the identifications of people are checked and vehicles are inspected when entering the parking lots of stations, some of which have sandbags piled outside like bunkers. "It is due to the situation in the city and the threats against members of police agencies," police spokesman Jacinto Segura said. "There is a brief revision (search) of the vehicle and the identification of the person, including staff and workers." Threats against police are no idle matter in Juarez. Twenty-four city police officers have been slain this year, Segura said. The latest victim was 20-year-veteran Jesus Hernandez Talamantes, 57, who died at a hospital Wednesday after being shot in the head during a gunfight with a pair of bank robbers. Threats and other propaganda by the cartels are often made using banners hung from bridges or other high-visibility locations and graffiti, nicknamed "narco-pintas." Graffiti from La Linea, or the Juarez drug cartel, claimed the car bombing was because Mexican federal police are allegedly working for the Sinaloa drug cartel reputedly led by Joaquin "Chapo" Guzman. Mexican federal authorities have repeatedly denied federal police favor one cartel over another. Earlier this year, federal police replaced the Mexican army in running the anti-crime operation in Juarez. Federal police said the car bombing was in retaliation for the arrest of Jesus Armando Acosta Guerrero, alias "35," who is accused of being an operations leader of La Linea. Acosta, according to police, was key in the cartel hierarchy. Acosta is suspected of not only overseeing drug deals and the elimination of enemies, but he was also responsible for bribing authorities at the local, state and national level. The bribe money was paid to a person known as "La Leyenda," or the Legend, who would then pass the cash to corrupt officials. Police alleged Acosta received direct orders from Jose Antonio "El Diego" Acosta Hernandez, who follows command in the cartel hierarchy after Juan Pablo "El JL" Ledezma, who is the lieutenant of reputed cartel boss Vicente Carrillo Fuentes. The Juarez bombing follows the history of Colombian drug cartels, which have been using car bombs and improvised explosive devices (IED) for 30 years. A report on IEDs in Colombia published last December in The Journal of ERW and Mine Action stated that IEDs have been used in a variety of forms besides vehicles, including donkey-drawn carts, bicycles and ambulances. Bombs have also been set in buildings as booby traps for police. The report stated members of terrorist groups such as ETA from Spain and the Irish Republican Army visited Colombia in the 1980s and 1990s to train cartels, guerrillas and paramilitary groups how to make bombs. "The car bombing indicates how extreme the conflict between the Juarez cartel and their adversaries has become," said Howard Campbell, an anthropology professor at the University of Texas at El Paso who studies drug trafficking. "The Juarez cartel believes -- and all evidence seems to indicate -- that federal forces have mainly targeted their organization in Juarez, not the Chapo Guzman cartel," Campbell said. "Most Juarez residents and the majority of analysts in the U.S. and Mexico feel that the Chapo Guzman cartel has strong support within certain sectors of federal law enforcement and the military in Mexico." On July 18, graffiti in Juarez told the FBI and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration they had 15 days to go after Mexican federal police supporting the Sinaloa cartel or there will be another car bombing. Last week, the Sinaloa drug cartel hung a banner in Chihuahua City telling Gov. Jose Reyes Baeza to get rid of Fernando Ornelas, who heads the state police intelligence center known as Cipol. The banner claimed Ornelas is "supporting the narcoterrorists from La Linea" and that violence will follow if he isn't removed. "We don't want to kill innocents," the banner said. Earlier this month, the U.S. State Department re-issued a travel warning for Mexico with specific caution for U.S. citizens visiting Juarez, the Valley of Juarez and towns in the northwestern part of the state of Chihuahua. The document stated three times as many people have been killed in Juarez since 2006 than in any other city in Mexico. The city with the second-most homicides since 2006 is Culiacan, the capital of Sinaloa state and base for the Sinaloa cartel. The State Department also warned travelers about violence in other regions of the country. "It is imperative that U.S. citizens understand the risks involved in travel to Mexico," the warning stated. Campbell said the car bombing is another example of drug trafficking organizations exceeding the power of the government in specific regions. "Sadly, the future seems to hold no short-term end to the violence," Campbell said. "Currently, the Mexican government appears too weak, disorganized and corrupt to stop or significantly lessen the violence." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D