Pubdate: Thu, 03 Jun 1999 Source: Boulder Weekly (CO) Contact: http://www.boulderweekly.com/ Author: Al Giordano Note: This article originally appeared in the Boston Phoenix FRIENDS LIKE THESE TWO PRESIDENTS TALK UP THE DRUG WAR IN THE HOUSE OF A DRUG TRAFFICKER FEBRUARY 15, 1999: President William Clinton met today with Mexican president Ernesto Zedillo to negotiate better cooperation between their nations in the fight against drugs. Incredibly, the anti-narcotics summit was hosted by powerful Mexican banker Roberto Hernandez Ramirez, a man publicly accused of trafficking cocaine and laundering illicit drug money. But that story wasn't reported in the States, despite a controversy over Hernandez's alleged involvement in the drug trade that's raged on the Yucatan peninsula for two years. A valentine to the press The heart-shaped box appeared on Air Force One. It was Valentine's Day 1999, and the Comeback Kid was getting out of Dodge. Bill Clinton had, just two days prior, escaped vanquishment by the U.S. Senate in Washington, DC. The presidential jet roared out of the February chill toward the tropical city of Merida. Clinton, in a video image broadcast across the globe that evening, stepped into the press cabin of the plane wielding a big pink heart-shaped box and doled out valentine chocolates to the reporters and photographers covering this trip. And to underscore with levity that the subject would now be changed-from impeachment and Monica to "drugs"-the White House press handlers regaled the journalists with bottles of hemp beer. The marijuana in the brew's recipe was reportedly non-intoxicating. Still, they were high, on laughter if not impunity, on Air Force One. Awaiting the presidential entourage in Merida was the U.S. ambassador to Mexico, Jeffrey Davidow. In the weeks before, while most of the White House staff was busy steering the president through domestic political crisis, Davidow had been in Mexico, laying the groundwork for the presidential visit. Davidow is no novice. He cut his diplomatic teeth at the U.S. embassy in Santiago, Chile, from 1971 to '73, the period when the U.S. and General Augusto Pinochet were plotting to destabilize the elected government of president Salvador Allende. By the time Air Force One landed in Merida, everything on the ground was under control. The city's central streets were deserted. Nine square blocks had been sealed by Mexican state and federal police. Hundreds of U.S. Secret Service agents had blanketed the region days in advance. They peered through their sunglasses from rooftops. Their network of cell phones fell like a web over the ancient Mayan capital. The city's annual Carnaval with its wild nightly parades, when seemingly every one of Merida's 750,000 residents emerges onto the streets and dances in plumed costumes to Caribbean rhythms, had been disappeared for the evening. The Dry Law was imposed. Merida on a normal day or night is an unusually tranquil city. Not even the police are armed. The response of the citizenry to the evening's invasion-of-state was to ignore the presidential summit almost completely. During the previous night's parades, throughout the city not a single banner was hung; nothing to welcome or to protest the arrival of Clinton and Zedillo. About 300 people did show up in City Square to cheer the gringos' arrival. They were supporters of Mexico's ruling political party who had received tickets to pass through the police lines, or they were folk dancers hired to provide a festive view from the second-floor dining hall where the dignitaries would nosh. The two presidents would be flown by helicopter the next morning, February 15, a short distance to the Temozon Sur plantation-the luxurious refurbished ranch owned by Roberto Hernandez Ramirez, president-owner of BANAMEX (the National Bank of Mexico before Hernandez bought it from the government a decade ago). Forbes magazine lists Hernandez as number 289 among the wealthiest men on earth. Narcotraficante President Zedillo had been staying at the Hernandez estate since February 12, though Hernandez himself was not present at the summit meeting. That two presidents would enjoy the hospitality of a powerful businessman would not, by itself, raise many eyebrows. But had just one of the White House correspondents holed up in the Fiesta Americana, the Hyatt, or the Holiday Inn wandered downtown or even downstairs to a newsstand, the official history of the summit might have been very different. Even a reporter who did not read Spanish might have comprehended the banner headline in the Merida daily Por Esto!: ROBERTO HERNANDEZ RAMIREZ: NARCOTRAFICANTE. (Part I, Part II, Part III.) That same Valentine's Day, Por Esto! published the first installment of a three-part series about the banker, his rise to wealth and power, his political clout, and his alleged involvement with drugs and drug money. The series included 350 column-inches of text documented by 45 photographs, plus three maps tracing the route of Colombian cocaine through the banker's properties. According to the newspaper and its sources, coastal marshlands purchased by Hernandez in the late '80s and early '90s were the port of entry for massive volumes of cocaine delivered in small Colombian speedboats. From there, tons of the drug were loaded onto small planes and flown north from Hernandez's private airfield. Hernandez, the newspaper charged, was hiding behind empty "eco-tourism" resorts to wash drug profits. The series was a journalistic tour de force, the culmination of a 26-month investigation into the 43 kilometers of beachfront property owned by Hernandez-a region known by the locals as the "Coca Triangle." The newspaper went even further: it filed federal criminal complaints against Hernandez for drug trafficking, for the robbery of national archeological treasures (his properties include the ancient Mayan ruins of Chac Mool and others), and for the environmental destruction caused by the cocaine-trafficking operations to the Sian Ka'an nature preserve. Not a word about this controversy would appear in the U.S. news media before or after the Clinton-Zedillo summit. One could search the Internet, Lexis-Nexis, the major dailies, the wire services, the entire English-speaking world; the story was neither published, promoted, criticized, nor rebutted. And yet the story has raged in Yucatan and the eastern Yucatan coastal state of Quintana Roo, where the property in question is located, since December 16, 1996, when a fishermen's cooperative blew the whistle on Hernandez's cocaine port and airfield to Por Esto! and pointed the newspaper to the evidence. Por Esto! published the fishermen's accounts of threats and harassment by Hernandez, who, they said, wanted to drive them off their lands to eliminate witnesses to his drug-smuggling operation. Hernandez returned fire in 1997, filing charges of trespassing and defamation against reporter Renan Castro Madera, regional editor Santos Gabriel Us Ake, and editor and publisher Mario Menendez Rodriguez. Public opinion has not favored Hernandez's complaints. Since 1996, more than 100 town councils, unions, and civic organizations throughout the Yucatan Peninsula have passed resolutions supporting the newspaper in its fight to expose the man they call a narco-banker. The governor flees The story got new legs on March 28, when the powerful governor of Quintana Roo, Mario Villanueva Madrid, disappeared during his last week of office, fleeing from drug-trafficking charges. An often crude but always media-savvy politician, Villanueva has issued videotaped communiquE9s and even bought newspaper ads from his hidden locations claiming that the prosecution against him is an act of political vengeance. The now ex-governor of the Caribbean state that's home to the world-class Cancun tourist resorts is not going down quietly. He may drag others down with him, including Clinton's pal Roberto Hernandez Ramirez. "I have a lot of information," Villanueva told the Mexican national daily Reforma on March 23, a few days before his disappearance. "A lot. It can involve more people. In the event that this is not resolved, I will make it known." The story is migrating north, and there's not a border patrol that can stop it. Until now, international media accounts of rampant drug-war corruption on Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula have for the most part been managed and controlled by official U.S. and Mexican sources. The investigation and prosecution of Villanueva-a joint venture of the U.S. and Mexican governments and, now, the 176 nations of the international police agency Interpol that have joined the manhunt-was supposed to reinforce the party line that narco-corruption at the highest levels will no longer be tolerated. But the takedown of Villanueva-suspected of deep involvement in protecting the illicit drug trade and in other criminal and anti-democratic ventures-merely diverts attention from the wheel of institutionalized corruption in which he was a cog. By profiting from drug traffic, Villanueva was simply enjoying the fruits that all governors of the ruling party have been granted for decades. The same institutions that chase him today protected him for almost six years in office. Villanueva's mysterious escape, and his promise to spill the secrets of the Mexican narco-state, have already begun to shake the comfy worlds of powerful people-among them BANAMEX owner Hernandez and his presidential houseguests. Hernandez blamed Villanueva, at the time Quintana Roo's governor, for Por Esto!'s 1996 reports about his alleged drug crimes. The banker addressed the problem the way most public-relations disasters are managed in Mexico. "Hernandez complained to President Zedillo," reported the Mexico City daily El Universal on April 5, "who at his turn had spoken with Villanueva, but the attacks did not cease." This was the first time El Universal or any national newspaper had mentioned Hernandez in connection with narco-news. And even then, it was included almost as an aside in a colorful profile by writer Mario Lara Klahr on governor-turned-fugitive Villanueva. The spin of the profile was that the governor and Hernandez were at war because Villanueva was "interested" in the bank owner's coastal properties. That same day, El Universal, one of Mexico's two major establishment broadsheets, published an almost full-page interview with Hernandez about the banking industry-a puff piece complete with flattering photo portraits. The daily did not ask Hernandez about the drug charges or about the Mexican banking industry's current drug-money-laundering crisis-even though, just five days before, three major Mexican banks (including BANAMEX's top competitor, Bancomer) had pled guilty in U.S. federal court to hiding hundreds of millions of dollars for the giant cocaine cartels. Lara's piece, meanwhile, also included the unsubstantiated supposition that Villanueva was an owner of Por Esto! In fact, Villanueva's government had harassed and threatened Por Esto! repeatedly-withholding payment for government advertising, failing to provide police response to a payroll robbery at the newspaper's Cancun offices, and excluding the paper's reporters and photographers from official functions. Por Esto! is published by Mario Menendez Rodriguez, a well-known and combative veteran journalist whose political activism dates back to Mexico City's 1968 student movement. Menendez publishes dailies in both Merida and Cancun and has been imprisoned several times for his anti-government reports. "The governor of Quintana Roo is not an owner of Por Esto! That's ridiculous," says Menendez. "Look at the printing machinery we use. It's always breaking. The people of this region know how I live and how this newspaper works. If El Universal has some documentation or proof that he has anything to do with this newspaper, I challenge them to show it." (A week after the El Universal story, the national magazine Proceso reported that Hernandez himself had orchestrated the leak of documents upon which Mexico's national press had based the report.) Mexican government implicated On April 12, Por Esto! resumed publishing the results of its investigations into Hernandez's affairs, vowing: "Loyal to the truth, Por Esto! will not fold in the fight. ... The federal executive branch is the major accomplice of the drug barons in Mexico." The accompanying story linked a BANAMEX legal-department director-the Republic's former first assistant attorney general, who was fired, according to Por Esto!, for his illegal activities related to drug trafficking -to three known drug traffickers, one a witness under the protection of U.S. anti-drug prosecutors, and charged that the U.S. government has "wide and deep knowledge" of Hernandez's drug-trafficking activities. The newspaper also identified the state delegate of the Mexican federal prosecutor's office as a former BANAMEX employee and reported that the Mexican armed forces responsible for drug enforcement on the peninsula have received orders not to enter Hernandez's coastal properties, which, according to Por Esto!, are still being used as a major cocaine-trafficking port. That Menendez continues with the investigation is no surprise. What is new is that, for the first time, other journalists are taking on the story. Carlos Ramirez, editor of the feisty national political magazine La Crisis, publishes a daily column in both El Universal and Por Esto! In an April 6 column analyzing the Villanueva case, he blamed the ex-governor's fall from grace on his antagonism with Hernandez, "the all-powerful owner of BANAMEX," over tourist-development sites in and around Cancun. "Villanueva lost due to the weight of the power relations of BANAMEX," Ramirez wrote, going on to describe a strong personal and social relationship between BANAMEX's Hernandez and Mexican president Ernesto Zedillo, who, Ramirez reported, has vacationed at the banker's Cancun haciendas and at a Hernandez-owned Caribbean island that's been linked to the late Colombian narco-trafficker Pablo Escobar Gaviria. The April 11 edition of Proceso, the most respected newsweekly in Mexico, ended the Mexican national media's long reluctance to repeat Por Esto!'s drug-trafficking charges against Hernandez. Under the headline WITH THE FLIGHT OF VILLANUEVA, ROBERTO HERNANDEZ ESCAPES AN ENEMY, Proceso recounted a private September 1998 meeting between then-governor Villanueva and journalists during which Villanueva confided, "Behind this smear campaign that has been unleashed against me I see the hand of Roberto Hernandez." The piece went on to describe Por Esto!'s campaign to portray Hernandez as a drug trafficker, relaying the paper's reports that almost 30 percent of the nearly 30 tons of cocaine intercepted by the Mexican prosecutor general's agents had been seized on property owned by the BANAMEX chief. It noted Hernandez's 1997 suits against the paper and reported that, the previous week, Quintana Roo judge Marco Antonio Traconis Varguez had issued arrest warrants against three of the paper's journalists. Spin Ciudad The gamble taken by the White House and the US Embassy in Mexico-that the drug story on Clinton's host would never get out-has already been lost. Jorge Madrazo Cuellar, Prosecutor General of the Republic-Mexico's equivalent of the attorney general-is understandably nervous about Villanueva's escape and its mounting consequences for his own job. Opposition leaders have already called Madrazo before the federal House of Deputies to answer charges that he intentionally let Villanueva slip away. (At that meeting, Madrazo divulged that many of his former prosecutors and officers have gone to work as cocaine traffickers-an admission by the chief federal prosecutor that his office has functioned as a narco-school.) The defendant ex-governor remains at large, buying full-page ads in national dailies and issuing video communiquE9s that may soon begin to implicate his nemesis Hernandez directly in the narco-trade. And so in a bizarre act of prosecution-by-publicity, the prosecutor general is defending his behavior by taking out ads of his own. The opening advertisement for the prosecution, published on April 9 in all of Mexico's major national newspapers, enumerated five major denials that were surreal in their capacity to suggest the opposite of their intent. The ad stated: that the drug charges against Villanueva were not politically motivated; that no United States agency had pressured Mexican prosecutors to jail Villanueva; that the Villanueva prosecution was unrelated to the fifth anniversary of the homicide of 1994 presidential candidate Luis Donaldo Colosio and was not an attempt to divert public attention from that case; that the Villanueva prosecution was not motivated by "personal obsession by the Prosecutor General of the Republic"; that the Villanueva investigation had nothing to do with Roberto Hernandez Ramirez's legal action against Por Esto! All of the above are plausible in their inverse; the case could be motivated by a confluence of political factors. If we heed the journalistic principle "follow the money," the weightiest of them-reaching to the White House in Washington-involves presidential pal Hernandez and his vast power as the BANAMEX owner. Por Esto! reported the story, and the result was that three of its journalists are today being persecuted with live arrest warrants. But the escape of Governor Villanueva has forced Mexico's national press to accept that there is indeed a story here. Whether U.S. media organizations that cover Mexico will do their job remains to be seen. But when Bill Clinton agreed to hold his anti-drug summit with the Mexican president on Hernandez's plantation, he inadvertently invited their scrutiny. The invitation came with the heart-shaped box. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea