Pubdate: Mon, 14, June 1999 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 1999 Houston Chronicle Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Forum: http://www.chron.com/content/hcitalk/index.html Author: Rick Rockwell Date: MON 06/14/99 Section: A Page: 23 FOR MANY, ESCAPING MEXICO IS A MATTER OF LIFE OR DEATH When Mexico's President Ernesto Zedillo acknowledged recently the extent of poverty in his proud nation, it seemed like a first step toward solving a problem many Americans also want addressed. For Americans, the mention of Mexico conjures one stereotypical image: a flood of desperate, unemployed people illegally crossing our border. The reasoning on this side of the border seems to be that if Mexico's economy gets better, Mexicans will have less need to come here. Of course, that reasoning looks at immigration as if it were simply caused by a lack of jobs in Mexico. That simple-minded approach ignores other catalysts for immigration, and refuses to look at the entire Mexican sociopolitical climate. Take a closer look at Mexico and you'll see the secrets Mexico's president isn't discussing. Those not-so-well-kept secrets are contained in a growing number of human rights reports which show the country's record for torture and extrajudicial killings grew worse in the past decade. Abusive police and military groups, guerrilla insurgencies and a climate where basic human rights are often absent might seem more like Kosovo than Mexico. That dark political climate also could be pushing Mexicans north. Consider the case of Jose Tomas Capistran Rios. Two years ago, an immigration judge in Chicago granted Capistran legal asylum in the United States. In Mexico, Capistran had reported about abuses by the Mexican army fighting guerrilla groups. For this type of critical reporting, Capistran was kidnapped, tortured and charged with being a rebel sympathizer, aiding terrorists. Freed before his trial, Capistran decided it would be safer for him and his family if he fled north. But the ugly human rights reports coming out of Mexico show that for every case like Capistran's, there are many others in which people never make it out. In a report last fall, the Organization of American States, or OAS, criticized Mexico for its record on summary executions by police and the military without trial. The report also noted the rising rate of forced disappearances and illegal detention by Mexican authorities. Last year, Amnesty International issued a report with similar criticisms. The extent of the problem is hard to quantify. Statistics for such human rights abuses are inexact and vary widely. The Amnesty International report notes a figure of more than 100 forced disappearances in 1997 in the state of Chihuahua. The OAS report documents 65 such cases in 1997 for the country. At a recent conference about human rights in Mexico at DePaul University in Chicago, several experts pointed to a familiar culprit behind the human rights abuses and the breakdown of the rule of law. They blamed drugs and the corruption that drug trafficking breeds as a cause of Mexico's problems The Inter-American Press Association lists Colombia and Mexico as the two nations where the most journalists have been killed or attacked in this hemisphere during the past decade. In Mexico, reporters are often like the coal miner's canary: violence against journalists is often a sample of what will come on a larger scale later. An example is the case of J. Jesus Blancornelas, editor of the Tijuana weekly, Zeta. In fall 1997, Mexico's notorious Tijuana cartel attacked Blancornelas in daylight on his way to work. Gang members fired submachine guns and assault rifles, spraying Blancornelas' vehicle with more than 70 bullets on a city street. Blancornelas was seriously wounded, but survived. His bodyguard was killed as was the leader of the ambush, David Barrsn Carona. Days earlier, Blancornelas had written about Barrsn's connection to the killing of Mexican army officials and his criminal activities in the United States. After his recovery, the editor, also a renowned investigative reporter, said he felt the attack was retaliation for his reporting. Blancornelas and his staff have investigated ties between the Tijuana cartel and powerful politicians in Baja California. A year later, Blancornelas still walked with a limp after surgeons removed three bullets, one lodged near his spine. After the ambush, Zedillo committed army troops to guard the editor. Since the order, other prominent journalists and writers, who have received threats from drug lords, have been given similar protection. Before the attack on Blancornelas, law enforcement authorities in Baja California had been the targets of assassinations. But after the attack, the floodgates opened. A series of killings of midlevel drug dealers occurred in Tijuana. Almost a year after the attack on Blancornelas, one of the leaders of the rival Juarez cartel, Rafael Munoz Talavera, was killed. Mexican authorities pinned the blame on the leaders of the Tijuana cartel, the Arellano Felix brothers. Mexican authorities have pursued the four brothers who control the Tijuana cartel since 1993, when the gang was tied to a bloody hit at Guadalajara's airport, in which Cardinal Juan Jesus Posadas Ocampo and six other people were killed. Last fall, this frenzied killing spree seemed to peak with the massacre of 19 people in El Sauzal, near the resort city of Ensenada, barely 60 miles from the U.S. border. Reporters who saw the grisly aftermath said one victim was a 1-year-old baby; another, a pregnant teen-ager. Mexican authorities said the leaders of the Tijuana cartel wanted to kill Fermin Castro, a small-time marijuana distributor who competed with elements of the Tijuana cartel. They killed his family and friends as a way of sending a message: Those who cross drug lords can expect extreme vengeance and innocents will be killed without a second thought. What these violent episodes underscore is the erosion of personal security and human rights in Mexico, as narcotics gangs gain the upper hand. Because Mexico's judges, prosecutors and police are often suspected of being the cartels' paid accomplices, Mexico's army is increasingly deployed to stop drug gangs. But as the reporting of Blancornelas and other Mexican reporters has revealed, that role has made the army targets of drug hits and corruption, the same devices used to cow other Mexican institutions. At the DePaul University conference, some experts openly connected the reports of human rights abuses by the Mexican army to the war on drugs. The reports of extrajudicial executions and disappearances blamed on the military could be seen as an overreaction to the drug war, a way of answering vengeance with more vengeance. The message back to drug lords: The military will use every means possible to defend itself. The real victims in this escalating atmosphere of violence are Mexico's citizens. Not connected to the drug gangs, the guerrillas or the corrupt bureaucracy, hard-working Mexicans just want somewhere safe to raise a family. Is there really any reason to blame someone who wants to get out of the confluence of grinding poverty, violence and human rights abuses that we call modern Mexico? In the United States, if we want to be a good neighbor, we need to look beyond the symptoms -- like immigration -- of Mexico's problems and join Mexico's people in a hunt for the causes of the culture of violence that affects both sides of the border. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea