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101Mexico: Mexico's Drugwar May Try New TackSat, 26 May 2012
Source:Denver Post (CO) Author:Weissenstein, Michael Area:Mexico Lines:Excerpt Added:05/27/2012

Presidential Hopeful to Focus on Reducing Violence

Mexico City (AP) - Shortly after sunrise last month in the border city of Nuevo Laredo, police found 14 butchered bodies in a van outside city hall, a salvo in a seesawing battle of horrors between Mexico's two most-powerful drug cartels.

Soon after, nine people were hanged from a bridge in Nuevo Laredo. Fourteen heads were left in coolers outside city hall. Eighteen mutilated bodies were dumped by a scenic lake in western Mexico. The decapitated bodies of 49 people were dumped outside a small town 75 miles from the U.S. border.

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102 Mexico: Drug Probe Targets Mexican ArmySat, 26 May 2012
Source:Wall Street Journal (US) Author:Cardoba, Jose de Area:Mexico Lines:187 Added:05/27/2012

MEXICO CITY-The arrest of a former deputy defense minister and three other retired and active high-ranking Mexican army officers on suspicion of having been in the pay of a drug cartel is shaping up as the biggest scandal to hit the army in years.

Last week, a judge issued preliminary detention orders for three generals and a lieutenant colonel. The move allows prosecutors from the organized-crime division of the Attorney General's Office to question the men for up to 40 days before formal charges would need to be filed.

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103Mexico: Mexico Must Fight Drug Dealers, Not ItselfWed, 16 May 2012
Source:Indianapolis Star (IN) Author:Navarrette, Ruben Area:Mexico Lines:Excerpt Added:05/17/2012

When you're addressing a crowd, there are those not-so-subtle indicators that your message is not getting through. For me, the hint came when, during a recent talk in which I declared my support for the Mexican drug war, a woman in the audience yelled: "Sellout!"

It was startling but also refreshing. As a Mexican-American, I'm often accused by the right wing of being -- as one reader put it the other day -- a "pro-illegal-alien opinion writer." It was a nice change of pace to have someone on the left wing accuse me of not being supportive enough of a liberal cause. It tells me that I'm just where I need to be.

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104 Mexico: Journalists' Killings Spread Fear in MexicoFri, 04 May 2012
Source:Toronto Star (CN ON) Author:Estey, Myles Area:Mexico Lines:105 Added:05/07/2012

MEXICO CITY-More than 100 journalists and supporters gathered Friday - - the day after three photographers were found murdered in the eastern port city of Veracruz - to call for more protections for journalists covering Mexico's complex and deadly drug war.

State officials confirmed Thursday that the bodies of photographers Guillermo Luna and Gabriel Huge, who worked for the Notiver local newspaper, were found dismembered, with evidence of torture.

Irasema Becerra, described as Luna's girlfriend, and Esteban Rodriguez, a former journalist working as a welder, were found alongside them, a later statement said.

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105 Mexico: Dismembered Bodies of Photojournalists Found in MexicoFri, 04 May 2012
Source:Globe and Mail (Canada) Author:Verma, Sonia Area:Mexico Lines:72 Added:05/06/2012

Thursday marked World Press Freedom Day, a UN-declared event meant to underscore the connection between journalism and democracy. It also highlights the very real dangers journalists face reporting the news in the world's hot zones.

These days, one of the worst places to be a journalist is Veracruz, Mexico. There, on World Press Freedom Day, the dismembered bodies of three photojournalists -- Gabriel Huge, Guillermo Luna and Esteban Rodriguez -- were found in a shallow waterway in the Mexican port city. The body of Luna's girlfriend, Irasema Becerra, was found not far from them. Mexican prosecutors said the victims showed signs of being tortured and that their bodies had been dismembered. The killings were likely committed by organized drug cartels that have terrorized the region for years.

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106Mexico: Fox Calls Drug War A Failure, Urges LegalizationFri, 13 Apr 2012
Source:Dallas Morning News (TX) Author:Corchado, Alfredo Area:Mexico Lines:Excerpt Added:04/13/2012

SAN CRISTOBAL, Mexico - The United States needs to consider legalizing all illegal drugs or risk having the continent become an expanding war zone, argues former President Vicente Fox, insisting that governments are not in the business of legislating morality.

As President Barack Obama and other regional leaders prepared to gather over the weekend in Cartagena, Colombia, for the annual Summit of the Americas, Fox called the war on drugs a failure and said that the U.S. and its partners must look beyond criminalizing drug use and employing military tactics to fight traffickers.

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107Mexico: Legalize Drugs? Obama Administration Flatly Says NoFri, 13 Apr 2012
Source:Houston Chronicle (TX) Author:Althaus, Dudley Area:Mexico Lines:Excerpt Added:04/13/2012

MEXICO CITY - The leaders of the Americas meet with President Brack Obama in Colombia over the weekend where he is expected to hang tough on Washington's anti-narcotics and Cuba policies, positions ever-more unpopular in a region drifting away from U.S. dominance.

Obama flies into the Colombian beach resort city of Cartagena on Friday for the 48-hour Summit of the Americas, a gathering of all but two of the region's 35 national leaders. Cuban President Raul Castro wasn't invited, and Ecuador's Rafael Correo is staying home to protest the snub.

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108 Mexico: What Doomed Fast And FuriousSun, 01 Apr 2012
Source:Arizona Daily Star (Tucson, AZ) Author:Steller, Tim Area:Mexico Lines:168 Added:04/01/2012

Top targets, in reality, were FBI informants, but ATF didn't know

Even before hundreds of guns went across the border as part of Operation Fast and Furious, an interagency communication gap had left the investigation doomed, recently released information suggests.

Unknown to the ATF agents leading the probe, the top possible targets of their investigation were working as FBI informants and were essentially "unindictable," according to congressional investigators and documents connected to the case.

The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives launched the investigation planning to go beyond arresting "straw buyers" and take down a whole cross-border gun-running ring. But it could never have reached its top targets, two brothers named Miramontes from the El Paso area, because they were protected "national security assets," says a Feb. 1 memo by U.S. Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., and U.S. Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa.

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109 Mexico: Mexican Drug Wars Devastate Sleepy Farm ValleySat, 17 Mar 2012
Source:Toronto Star (CN ON) Author:Estey, Myles Area:Mexico Lines:103 Added:03/19/2012

VALLE DE JUAREZ, MEXICO-Driving slowly down the empty streets of Guadalupe, former resident Marycarmen Madrid points to scorched and crumbling houses, scattered with the personal effects of former residents.

She identifies some of the hundreds killed, terrorized or forced into leaving this town on the U.S. border. Her family's home was burned down last year, along with dozens of others, in the campaign of extreme violence and terror that has gripped the region.

Known locally as the Valle de Juarez, this was once a sleepy agricultural hub an hour east of Ciudad Juarez. Then, in 2008, the valley exploded as it became a battlefield in Mexico's drug wars, which have claimed more than 50,000 lives.

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110 Mexico: Mexico's Politics: Back to the Future?Sat, 17 Mar 2012
Source:Toronto Star (CN ON) Author:Ross, Oakland Area:Mexico Lines:208 Added:03/19/2012

MEXICO CITY -- In some countries, a man can't get a shoeshine without seeming to make a political statement.

Mexico, it seems, is such a country -- and, on this occasion at least, Ricardo Barroso Agramont is such a man.

Wearing a navy-blue business suit and a scarlet tie, Barroso is lounging at a small, red shoeshine kiosk, while a bootblack attends to the buffing of his footwear.

The mid-morning traffic lurches past along Avenida Insurgentes Norte, among the main thoroughfares in Mexico City, and political activists stream back and forth on foot through the tall metal gates that lead to the huge nine-storey headquarters of the once invincible Institutional Revolutionary Party, the authoritarian political behemoth that dominated this land for seven long decades, until swept from power in watershed elections 12 years ago.

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111Mexico: Mexican Politicians Got Cartel MoneySat, 11 Feb 2012
Source:Dallas Morning News (TX) Author:Corchado, Alfredo Area:Mexico Lines:Excerpt Added:02/11/2012

Businessman, Now in U.S. Custody, Accused of Playing Middleman

A Mexican businessman is in U.S. custody, accused of money laundering and serving as a liaison between drug cartels and powerful politicians, including a former governor who allegedly received millions of dollars in exchange for protecting the criminals, according to a 14-page court filing in Texas.

Four confidential informants told the Drug Enforcement Administration that Antonio Pena-arguelles was paid millions by leaders of the Gulf cartel and the Zetas to help influence politicians, including Tomas Yarrington, the former governor of Tamaulipas state, which borders Texas.

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112Mexico: Juarez Cops Ordered To Stay In Hotel After SlayingsThu, 02 Feb 2012
Source:Denver Post (CO)          Area:Mexico Lines:Excerpt Added:02/07/2012

CIUDAD JUAREZ, nexico - Every police officer in the Mexican border city of Ciudad Juarez has been ordered to leave home and stay in a hotel after the killing of five officers by a local drug cartel.

The cartel threatened a week ago to kill one policeman a day unless Police Chief Julian Leyzaola resigns. Juarez Mayor Hector Murguia said Wednesday that the attacks are a response to toughening police action against cartels. He said there is no way Ley zaola is stepping down.

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113Mexico: UN Gang's Key Cartel Contact Gunned Down In MexicoWed, 18 Jan 2012
Source:Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Author:Bolan, Kim Area:Mexico Lines:Excerpt Added:01/19/2012

Man who often returned to Surrey believed to have owed money after losing shipment of cocaine

CULIACAN, Mexico -- A B.C. man executed in the Mexican state of Sinaloa this week was a high-ranking member of the United Nations gang who had direct contact with Mexican cartels, The Vancouver Sun has learned.

Salih Abdulaziz Sahbaz, 37, spent much of the last three years in Mexico and was the key cartel contact for the notorious B.C. gang, police sources confirmed.

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114Mexico: Gov't Choppers Under Fire In Mexico Drug WarMon, 16 Jan 2012
Source:Denver Post (CO) Author:Stevenson, Mark Area:Mexico Lines:Excerpt Added:01/16/2012

MEXICO CITY-The Mexican armed forces and prosecutors have suffered at least 28 gunfire attacks on helicopters in the five years since the government launched an offensive against drug cartels, according to official documents made public Monday.

The attacks show the increasing ferocity of Mexico's drug gangs, and also suggest support for what the Mexican government has said in the past: that 2010 may have been the worst year for the upward spiral in violence.

In the first two years of the drug war, reporting government agencies such as the air force, navy and Attorney General's Office reported no chopper attacks. But in 2008, four helicopters were hit by gunfire, wounding at least one officer aboard.

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115 Mexico: Government Withheld Data From Public on Drug WarThu, 12 Jan 2012
Source:Los Angeles Times (CA) Author:Wilkinson, Tracy Area:Mexico Lines:118 Added:01/14/2012

Under Pressure, Officials Release Partial Figures That Indicate the Toll Is 50,000

Reporting from Mexico City- Six months before a presidential election that his party is widely expected to lose, President Felipe Calderon is on the defensive about the government's blood-soaked drug war, with new revelations that it sought to conceal death toll statistics from the public.

By unofficial count, at least 50,000 people are believed to have been killed since Calderon deployed the military in the first days of his presidency in December 2006.

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116 Mexico: Creatively Confronting AddictionSat, 07 Jan 2012
Source:Lancet, The (UK) Author:Jones, Denna Area:Mexico Lines:84 Added:01/07/2012

We are all at risk of addiction.

Vices are endemic to the human condition and each of us has the potential to become an addict.

Scare statements? Not at the Museo Interactivo Sobre Las Adicciones (aka MIA) in CuliacA!n, Mexico. MIA is a unique interactive games and exhibit-based addiction museum""narcotics feature, but so too do alcohol, tobacco, food, gambling, and internet addictions. MIA broadcasts a strong message: addictions are pandemic and they are global.

"Addiction is a disease not a choice" , Nora Volkow, Director of the US National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), says as she speaks with me on the phone from her office in Rockville, MD. Volkow was influential in the American Society of Addiction Medicine's redefinition of addiction as a primary, chronic neurological disease, and she and her team advised on MIA's content, together with other experts from Mexico and Europe. "Blunted pathways and fewer D2 dopamine receptors mean addicts find it harder and harder to feel good" , she explains. "Even people with no baseline genetic risk can become addicts if their environment is stressful.

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117 Mexico: Guatemala New Center For Meth ProductionSun, 01 Jan 2012
Source:Richmond Times-Dispatch (VA)          Area:Mexico Lines:62 Added:01/01/2012

MEXICO CITY -- Mexico's powerful Sinaloa drug cartel appears to be extending its massive production of methamphetamine into neighboring Guatemala, as hundreds of tons of precursor chemicals stream into the Central American nation.

While Mexico is usually estimated to be the main supplier of meth used in the United States, seizure data suggest that Guatemala could in fact be producing as much or more.

That data, along with interviews with U.S. and Guatemalan officials, also indicate that Sinaloa cartel chief Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman is taking advantage of Guatemala's remote, isolated mountains and an alliance with a key Guatemalan trafficker to make the Central American nation a new international meth production base.

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118 Mexico: Mexico's Days Of The DeadSat, 31 Dec 2011
Source:Sydney Morning Herald (Australia) Author:McGeough, Paul Area:Mexico Lines:371 Added:12/31/2011

AT THE Church of Senor Del Perdom, sparrows swoop to scavenge on a slice of tomato and a bit of cheese squished into the brick paving. Untidy perhaps, but as the grimness of the church's forecourt is revealed, the birds become a welcome hint of the natural order in a party town that struggles to escape the unnerving and the unnatural.

In the past, a parade of bold-face names sallied to this resort city on Mexico's balmy Pacific coast. Frank Sinatra sang about it. The Kennedys honeymooned and the Nixons holidayed here. Howard Hughes ended his days here, Elvis Presley made a movie and John Wayne and Johnny "Tarzan" Weissmuller opened the fabled Hotel Los Flamingos, one of scores that now stand sentinel by Acapulco Bay's emerald waters.

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119Mexico: Mexico Gang Reportedly Ramping Up Meth Production InSat, 31 Dec 2011
Source:Dallas Morning News (TX)          Area:Mexico Lines:Excerpt Added:12/31/2011

MEXICO CITY -- Mexico's powerful Sinaloa drug cartel appears to be extending its massive production of methamphetamine into neighboring Guatemala, as hundreds of tons of precursor chemicals stream into the Central American nation.

While Mexico is usually estimated to be the main supplier of meth used in the United States, seizure data suggest that neighboring Guatemala could in fact be producing as much or more.

That data, along with interviews with U.S. and Guatemalan officials, also indicate that Sinaloa cartel chief Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman is taking advantage of Guatemala's remote, isolated mountains and an alliance with a key Guatemalan trafficker to make the Central American nation a new international meth production base.

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120Mexico: Latin American Leaders Assail Us Drug 'market'Thu, 22 Dec 2011
Source:Denver Post (CO) Author:Booth, William Area:Mexico Lines:Excerpt Added:12/22/2011

MEXICO CITY - Latin American leaders have joined together to condemn the U.S. government for soaring drug violence in their countries, blaming the United States for the transnational cartels that have grown rich and powerful smuggling dope north and guns south.

Alongside official declarations, Latin American governments have expressed growing disgust for U.S. drug consumers - both the addict and the weekend recreational user heedless to the misery and destruction paid for their pleasures.

"Our region is seriously threatened by organized crime, but there is very little responsibility taken by the drug-consuming countries," Guatemalan President Alvaro Colom said at a meeting this month of Latin leaders in Caracas. Colom said the hemisphere was paying the price for drug consumption in the United States with "our blood, our fear and our human sacrifice."

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