Pubdate: Fri, 20 Aug 2010 Source: New York Daily News (NY) Copyright: 2010 Daily News, L.P. Contact: http://www.nydailynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/295 Author: Juan Gonzalez Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Mexico BLOODY MEXICO DRUG WAR BOOSTS U.S. GUN SHOPS, BANKS They found the body of Edelmiro Cavazos on a dirt road on the outskirts of Santiago, a popular tourist spot near Monterrey, Mexico. The 38-year-old, U.S.-educated mayor of Santiago had been shot execution-style, hands tied behind his back, head bound with tape. Cavazos, whose body was found Wednesday, was the fifth Mexican mayor gunned down in the past two years - the latest high-profile victim in a nation that is bleeding to death from its War on Drugs. The mayhem in Mexico has gotten so bad that President Felipe Calderon launched an unprecedented public debate and political summit on ways to end the war, possibly by legalizing drugs. The reason Mexico's politicians are desperate for peace is simple. More people are dying each day from the bullets and bombs of drug traffickers in their country than are being killed in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars combined. In the border city of Juarez, the epicenter of the violence, 60 residents were gunned down between Friday and Monday. Since December 2006, 28,000 Mexicans have been murdered, including more than 2,000 police and security officials. Drug gangs have resorted to car bombs, kidnappings and have even blockaded wealthy neighborhoods of Monterrey in spectacular displays of force. The escalating carnage is a direct result of Calderon's decision, shortly after his election in 2006, to station 45,000 soldiers and police on the country's streets to combat the cartels. Calderon's military surge was backed by more than $1.2 billion in drug war aid from former President Bush, and by several hundred million more from the Obama administration. Although Mexican officials have captured or killed scores of drug lords and seized tons of drugs, the violence and the trafficking continue to mushroom. The country's tourism is dying, its industry is suffering and thousands have fled violence-plagued border cities like Tijuana, Matamoros and Juarez. Meanwhile, two industries in the U.S. are flourishing from Mexico's tragedy. More than 7,000 gun shops have sprouted on the U.S. side of the border, and their owners seem not to care where the merchandise goes. Three-quarters of the 84,000 weapons, including high-powered assault rifles, that Mexican officials have seized since 2006, originated in the U.S. Then there are the banks. On March 12, federal prosecutors in Miami charged Wachovia Bank with repeatedly failing to report possible money-laundering activity by money-transfer firms from Mexico that used the bank. Some of the more than $370billion wired to Wachovia from Mexico bought planes here that were used to transport drugs. Wells Fargo, which owns Wachovia, immediately entered into a deferred prosecution agreement and paid the federal government $160 million in fines. Several other U.S. banks have also been discovered flouting money-laundering laws. No wonder former Mexican president Vicente Fox, a conservative businessman, is urging his country to legalize the production, sale and distribution of drugs "as a strategy to weaken and break the economic system that allows cartels to earn huge profits." The Mexican people, Fox says, have paid too high a price for this war on drugs, while the gun dealers and bankers in the U.S. continue to make a killing. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake