Pubdate: Sat, 18 Aug 2012 Source: Monitor, The (McAllen, TX) Copyright: 2012 The Monitor Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/qsOVHygd Website: http://www.themonitor.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1250 Author: Ildefonso Ortiz Cited: Caravan for Peace: http://www.caravanforpeace.org/caravan/ CARAVAN FOR PEACE, MARCH AGAINST DRUG WAR, TO VISIT RGV ALAMO - A movement looking to end Mexico's drug war is set to arrive here in an effort to raise awareness to that country's rising death toll. On Thursday, Javier Sicilia's Caravan for Peace is scheduled to make a pit stop in Alamo for a day of events and personal testimonies related to Mexico's ongoing cartel violence, which has produced more than 60,000 deaths and 10,000 disappearances. Group organizers claim that drug prohibition has failed. The war on drugs has produced painful consequences in both Mexico and the United States, leaving a trail of death, pain and corruption in its path, the group's news release states. The group's founder, Javier Sicilia, a renowned poet and author in Mexico, became a national headline March 28, when his son Juan Francisco and six other men were killed by cartel gunmen. Since then, the poet became one of the leading opponents of Mexican President Felipe Calderon's drug war blaming him for the rising death toll. According to the caravan core manifesto listed in the news release, they ask for a different approach to drug policies that places individuals, their welfare and their dignity at the center of the policy calling for alternatives to prohibition. The group also takes a hard line against weapons calling for the U.S. to take stronger measures to stop weapons smuggling into Mexico. The group asks for both the U.S. and Mexico to hold financial institutions accountable for the prevention of money laundering through increased surveillance investigations, fines and criminal charges. The group's event is set to begin at 4 p.m. Thursday at the Arise center, 1417 South Tower Road, Alamo, where testimonies of drug war victims and musical performances which will be followed by a dinner. While the Caravan for Peace has garnered international attention, Reynosa resident Mario Ramirez is not a fan of the group's ideals. The businessman voiced his opinions Sunday while having a coffee at a local shopping center. "The only thing protecting the citizens from members of organized crime is the military," he said in Spanish. "If they end the war and send the troops back like these hippies ask, who's going to protect us. The police are a joke and the manosos (tricky criminals) are not going to suddenly turn humanitarians if the soldiers leave. " - --- MAP posted-by: Matt