Pubdate: Mon, 6 Dec 1999 Source: Guardian, The (UK) Copyright: Guardian Media Group 1999 Contact: http://www.guardian.co.uk/ Author: Duncan Campbell MEXICAN DRUGS GRAVE CAUSES RIFT AT US BORDER Relations between Mexico and the United States have grown increasingly tense since the two sides began digging up the bodies of victims of drugs wars from a site near the border. There are now strong suspicions that the Mexican police played a major part in the killings. At least six bodies have been found as work continued on the four sites near Ciudad Juarez, just south of the border from El Paso, Texas. Arturo Gonzalez Rascon, the attorney for the state of Chihuahua where the diggings are taking place, conceded: "It is possible that state and federal security forces could be involved in this." Law enforcement authorities believe that as many as 100 bodies, including many informants and possibly 22 Americans, may be recovered. Five people have been taken into custody at the Mexican ranch, La Campana. Senators in Mexico have attacked the foreign minister for allowing the FBI to take a major role in the investigation, and for allowing recovered bodies to be taken to the US for forensic examination. "Doesn't Mexico have the capacity to perform autopsies?" a senator asked. "Doesn't Mexico have the capacity to do excavations?" The FBI director, Louis Freeh, and the Mexican attorney general, Jorge Madrazo Cuellar, have jointly appeared at the scene to try to ease the tensions. The US has been aware of the existence of the graves for some time, but it only told the Mexicans at the last minute because of the possibility that some of their security forces were involved. Some Mexican politicians, including the presidential candidate, Cuauhtemoc Cardenas, are unhappy about what they saw as a violation of the country's sovereignty. They objected to what they saw as the US portrayal of drugs as a Mexican export rather than an American problem financed by American money. Mr Freeh said information about the graves had come from a number of informants, not one as previously reported. It was confirmed that the main informant was a former Mexican police officer who had worked for the Juarez drugs cartel. Mexico's own drugs tsar, Jesus Gutierrez Rebollo, an army general, was exposed as being in the pay of the Juarez cartel in 1997. And the former head of what was then called the federal security directorate, Rafael Aguilar Guajarado, was also believed to have been hired by the head of the cartel, Amado Carillo Fuentes. These last two are now both dead. Mr Guajarado was murdered in Cancun in 1993 and Mr Fuentes died while undergoing plastic surgery to change his appearance in 1997, sparking some of the infighting that was believed to have led to much of the bloodshed. In that light, Mr Cuellar made no apology for working with the FBI. "What affects sovereignty is not attacking criminal organizations," he said. "We are not going to leave one corner of Mexico to the sovereignty of the drug traffickers." The FBI has been assisting with DNA identification of the victims. Families of those who have disappeared in the past five years have been gathering, hoping for information. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk