Pubdate: Wed, 17 Nov 2010 Source: Latin American Herald-Tribune (Venezuela) Copyright: 2010 Latin American Herald-Tribune Contact: http://www.laht.com/Contacts.asp Website: http://www.laht.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/5047 TENTACLES OF MEXICAN DRUG MOBS EXTEND TO SPAIN, ITALY BARCELONA -- Mexico's powerful drug cartels have already established footholds in European countries such as Spain and Italy, respected Mexican journalist Luz Sosa said. Sosa was in Spain's second city to receive the 6th Vazquez Montalban Cultural and Political Journalism Prize for her work as a crime reporter for a newspaper in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico's murder capital. Organized crime groups have capitalized on the government's "ineffectiveness" and the international support they have received to grow their operations and extend their reach beyond Mexico, she said in an interview with Efe. Widespread crime has turned Ciudad Juarez, located across the Rio Grande from El Paso, Texas, into one of the most dangerous cities on the planet, with the number of homicides soaring to more than 2,700 this year. "You hear talk of femicide because many women have been killed, but we could also talk about juvenicide because most of the (victims) are young people," said Sosa, who added that "the root of the problem is organized crime, drug trafficking and, above all, impunity." The Mexican government is not "doing its job" because violence is continuing to grow and President Felipe Calderon's crime-fighting strategy "has failed." "Calderon has militarized the cities and based (criminal investigations) on torture and confession," with the result that "there are people in prison convicted of hundreds of murders who probably didn't commit all the crimes they confessed to," Sosa said. "The president appears in the news media saying that a bunch of drug traffickers were arrested, but the police investigations never touch the financial structure or the highest levels" of the organizations, she added. Sosa said U.S. President Barack Obama "backs Calderon's new strategy and international governments applaud his measures" as though "nothing were happening in Mexico," even though Mexicans know very well that a great deal is happening. According to the reporter, the lack of political will to get to the root of the problem is enabling "organized crime in Mexico to grow" and even spread its tentacles to Europe, Sosa said. Juarez first gained notoriety in the early 1990s when young women began to disappear in the area; more than 500 women have been killed in that border city since 1993, with the majority of the cases going unsolved. Ciudad Juarez, with 191 homicides per 100,000 residents, was the most violent city in the world in 2009, registering a higher murder rate than San Pedro Sula, San Salvador, Caracas and Guatemala City, two Mexican non-governmental organizations said in a report released earlier this year. Nationwide, some 28,000 people have died in drug-related violence since Calderon took office in December 2006 and deployed tens of thousands of federal police and army soldiers to drug-war hotspots. Mexico's most powerful drug trafficking organizations, according to experts, are the Sinaloa, Tijuana, Gulf, Juarez, Los Zetas, Beltran Leyva and La Familia Michoacana cartels. The cartels have expanded their presence into Nicaragua and other Central American countries in recent years, using that region as a base for distributing cocaine from Colombia to other countries, officials say. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart