Pubdate: Thu, 23 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: Delcia Lopez GROUP TARGETS DRUG PROHIBITION, WANTS 'DIFFERENT SOLUTION' ALAMO - Tears came down the face of Alma Estrada as she recalled the call she received two years ago telling her that gunmen had kidnapped her brother. His fate remains a mystery. Estrada, a lifelong Alamo resident, shared the story of her brother, Roberto Banda, 40, who worked as a road builder in Soto La Marina, Tamps., before his disappearance. Tales of desperation like Estrada's were shared by the various members of the Caravan for Peace movement, which made a stop Thursday afternoon in the Rio Grande Valley along its way to Washington, D.C. San Juana Martinez, another Alamo resident, recalled the fearful journey to Ciudad Mante, Tamps., to bury her 70-year-old aunt, Ninfa Hernandez, who had been raped and mutilated along with several other women by members of organized crime. "The Mexican authorities never did anything; they said to just drop it," Martinez said in Spanish, saying the victim's loved ones were told to stop asking about the case. The Peace Caravan was started by Mexican author Javier Sicilia after his son, Juan Francisco, and six other men were killed by cartel gunmen in Mexico state. "This is a crusade for the victims, for the justice and the peace that criminals and the bad political moves of our governments have stolen from us," Sicilia said in Spanish as he addressed more than 50 supporters gathered at the ARISE women's advocacy center in the area south of Alamo known as Little Mexico. "This war is the gate to hell," the author said. "There's pain everywhere. I've heard the pain on both sides of the border, and the governments refuse to take responsibility. "No one is going to bring back my son or the other victims of this war." The Caravan for Peace is looking to highlight the failure of drug prohibition and promote a dialogue toward drug legalization, strict gun control in the U.S., harsh criminal laws to fight money laundering, and humane treatment of immigrants, Sicilia said. "We as citizens must put pressure on the governments to promote a peace agenda," Sicilia said. "Without peace there is no justice." Caravan for Peace is not calling for drastic or immediate measures such as the withdrawal of the Mexican military or the automatic legalization of drugs, group spokesman Daniel Gershenson said. But the group is asking for an open dialogue to other options to prohibition. "We want to bring all the voices to the table to come up with a different solution because to continue down this road is suicide," Gershenson said. The group is asking for an end to the drug war but not an immediate pullout of military forces in Mexico, he said adding that to do so would be irresponsible. Military forces were used because after 71 years of political corruption, local and state police had become infiltrated and in some cases controlled by drug cartels, Gershenson said. "We are asking for a dialogue because the answer covers not only the law enforcement side, but it involves education and economic opportunities and many other areas, which are the reason why some turn to criminal organizations," he said. As the caravan travels across the nation, they are escorted by a police vehicle belonging to Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, an organization of retired police officers who are in favor of legalizing drugs. "I was a U.S. customs agent for 22 years," LEAP spokesman Richard Newton said. "We caught a lot of drugs. Did we make an impact on the drug trade or drug prices? No." According to Newton, much as it did after the Prohibition era of the 1920s, legalizing intoxicating substances - in this case, drugs rather than alcohol - would remove the criminal element and allow for government regulation. The objective of peace is noble, but how you reach that objective is where the debate begins, said Hidalgo County Sheriff Lupe Trevino, a fervent opponent of the legalizing drugs. "That would mean that everything that we have done since 1972, the thousands of lives and the billions spent fighting drugs would have been for nothing," Trevino said. "You can't just say, 'This is the end of it,' and have the criminal element have their way." If drugs were legalized, the sheriff said, members of the underworld would find another way to make money - like circumventing any new drug regulations - using their same methods. While alcohol can be a destructive substance, the sheriff said, it is not comparable to drugs. On a daily basis, Trevino said, police have to deal with drug addicts invading homes looking for loot to finance their habits. "How many times have you heard of an alcoholic breaking into a home to steal jewelry in order to buy beer?" Trevino asked. "The most important reason I oppose legalizing drugs is: What are we telling our children?" Trevino said. "That the use of drugs and all of the consequences that come with it are OK. That's why it can't be done." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom