Archive | Drug War

Tags: , , , ,

Deadly Attacks in Northern Veracruz

Posted on 23 December 2011 by admin

Armed men attacked three buses in northern Veracruz Thursday, killing at least eleven passengers. According to the state government, five assailants were killed when the military arrived at the scene of an attack. Some early reports cited a regional mayor estimating a death toll as high as forty victims.

The US Consulate in Matamoros has issued a warning to US citizens to use caution when travelling in Veracruz and recommends only traveling during the day. The same bulletin reiterated long-standing advice that U.S. citizens “defer non-essential travel to the state of Tamaulipas”.

Highways in the states of Tamaulipas, Veracruz, and San Luis Potosi have become notoriously dangerous, with criminals taking advantage of the cover of night to hold up passenger buses and private vehicles.

The main highways in northern Veracruz are connected to the port city of Tampico, just across the state line in Tamaulipas. The most dangerous roads in Tamaulipas lead to the border bridges with South Texas.

The bodies of ten murder victims were dumped in the Veracruz town of Tampico Alto this morning. Like the multi-homicide targeting the buses, the specific motive for the violence is unclear, but the perpetrators are assumed to be associated with organized crime operating in the region.

As has been the case with Tamaulipas, much of the violence in Veracruz is occurring under a mantle of fear-induced silence. The press freedom organization Reporters Without Borders this week named Veracruz one of the ten deadliest regions in the world for journalists.

Also this week, 900 police officers in the port city of Veracruz and its nearby suburb of Boca del Rio were dismissed and replaced by soldiers in what authorities describe as an anti-corruption measure.

Comments Off

Tags: ,

Ten Bodies Found in Newly Discovered Mass Grave in Durango

Posted on 20 December 2011 by admin

Ten bodies have been removed from a new mass grave which was found in Durango last Wednesday by Mexican soldiers. The discovery was made public Monday when state authorities in Durango said they were performing forensic tests to establish the identities of those buried in the pit.

More than 280 bodies have been discovered in mass graves around Durango since April. Many of the bodies were found in an advanced state of decomposition and state investigators were criticized for allegedly mishandling evidence. Only ten percent of the bodies have been identified.

A February 2010 US diplomatic cable published by Wikileaks described Durango as “the state unraveling most rapidly” – a strong statement in the context of the drug war related violence that has been wracking northern Mexico for years.

Comments Off

Tags: , , , , , , , ,

Sudden Spate of Violence Targeting Known Activists

Posted on 11 December 2011 by admin

Mexico has witnessed a recent spike in attacks targeting known human rights activists, many of them associated with the anti drug war movement.

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

This most recent spate of violence targeting activists started on November 28th when Nepomuceno Moreno was gunned down in his truck at an intersection in Hermosillo, not far from the state government palace. Moreno had spent more than a year searching for a son who was kidnapped – allegedly by state police.

The spokesperson for the Sonora state attorney general’s office suggested the murder may have been linked more to organized than to Moreno’s activism.

Then, on November 30th, Norma Andrade, the co-founder of a recognized anti-femicide organization in Ciudad Juarez was shot five times as she left her home. Investigators described the crime as a car-jacking gone wrong. Andrade, who narrowly survived the attack, said it was attempted murder – noting that her vehicle is 20 years old and that the gunman made no demands before discharging his weapon.

On December 6th, a dozen members of the Movement for Peace and Justice with Dignity traveled to the Ostula, Michoacan in western Mexico to observe a community consultation to petition the government for security forces. The delegation was traveling with Trinidad de la Cruz Crisóstomo; a community elder. “Don Trino” as he was known, was the town’s representative in talks with the government.

(Hernandez speaks, reporter interprets)

Citlali Hernandez, who participated in the observation trip, says once within the territory of Ostula, four armed men in ski masks blocked road. They boarded the delegation’s bus and took it to a foot path. She says Don Trino was identified and everyone was forced off the bus and told to lie face down on the ground.

HERNANDEZ (voiceover): “They took away our cell phones. They spoke repeatedly of massacring all of us. During this, they were beating Don Trino. We could hear his cries. From what we could hear, it sounded like they were stabbing him because of his screams and what they were saying.”

Hernandez says the armed men ordered the group to get back on the bus and go directly to the city of Lazaro Cardenas. Don Trino remained in the custody of the attackers.

The next day, the 73 year-old community leader was found dead – his body bearing signs of torture. Don Trino became the 28th community member killed since indigenous residents of Ostula took several hundred acres of farmland back from powerful local landbosses in mid-2009. Pedro Leyva, also a community leader from Ostula and a member of the Movement for Peace and Justice with Dignity was killed in October.

Attorney David Peña, who acts as legal counsel for the community, says the government is at least partially responsible for the crime for allowing armed groups to operate in the area unchecked, despite local requests for security patrols – specifically from a nearby Marine base.

PEÑA (voiceover): “This serious occurence cannot be viewed as an isolated incident committed by organized criminals operating in the area. It’s not an isolated incident and the state shares responsibility because it knows that these groups are operating and how they’re operating. We’ve told them about it as well as what specific measures to take and they’ve done nothing.”

About 5000 people live in the community of Ostula, WHICH is made up of small enclaves and a core population center. It lies along a highway near the port city of Lazaro Cardenas.

(Judisman speaks, reporter interprets)

Clara Judisman of the Movement for Peace and Justice with Dignity says the area around Lazaro Cardenas is a key route for the drug trade. It’s home to one of Latin America’s major sea ports and control of territory in and around the port is fundamental to organized crime operations.

Judisman says indigenous groups who are defending their territories and rights are being attacked and divided as criminals co-opt some residents to create internal strife. She says the case of Ostula demonstrates the concrete local effects of the global drug market on a community which wants to control its traditional territory.

Hours after Don Trino’s kidnapping, two other members of the Movement for Peace and Justice with Dignity were taken off of a bus in the neighboring state of Guerrero. Marcial Bautista are Eva Alarcón are long time leaders of an environmental movement of small farmers in the state. They were on their way to a meeting in Mexico City when the passenger bus in which they were traveling was boarded by armed men who witnesses say asked for the activists by name.

At the time of this report, their whereabouts remains unknown.

At a press conference held in aftermath of the attack in Ostula and the abductions in Guerrero – and with last week’s murder of Nepomuceno Moreno and the shooting of Norma Andrade still fresh in the collective memory, Araceli Rodiriguez – mother of a kidnapped federal policeman – voice a question that seems to be on the minds of many…

(Rodriguez speaks, reporter interprets)

Who’s next? – she asked. Who of those who have come forward to tell the stories of and experiences of Mexico’s drug war victims will be murdered before the eyes of an authority which – she says – has ignored petitions for protection.

Rodriguez confessed that she is scared and plans to examine security measures, but she does not plan to allow the environment of fear and intimidation silence the movement’s demands for justice.

(Originally aired December 9, 2011 on FSRN )

Comments Off

Tags: , ,

Developments, Insinuations, and Context in the Case of Nepomuceno Moreno’s Murder

Posted on 01 December 2011 by admin

Since I filed a mid-day story for FSRN on November 29, 2011 some developments of note have occurred in the case.

José Larrinaga, spokesman for State Attorney General of Sonora, held a press conference in which he said the main line of investigation into the case of Nepomuceno Moreno’s murder was a possible link to organized crime. He proceeded to list off criminal cases to which Mr. Moreno has been linked; one of which involved a 32 year old drug conviction.

The wording of the statements led to contradictory press accounts which reported Nepomuceno Moreno as having a lengthy criminal record. For example, the AP article on the press conference stated “In 1997, Moreno was jailed again on drug-related charges, Larrinaga said” which is factually incorrect (yet widely distributed).

The audio of the spokesman’s press conference statements:

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

and (thanks to animalpolitico.com and MVS Noticias) is available here: http://www.divshare.com/download/launch/16281687-a52

According to the statements made by the Sonora AG spokesman in the Novemeber 29th press conference, the cases to which Nepomuceno Moreno have been linked are;

  • A 1979 drug charge in Arizona which resulted in a conviction
  • A 1997 kidnapping case in which Moreno was both a victim and a key witness for the prosecution. His testimony implicated two brothers, Ramón and Ambrosio Vázquez Villagrana, as responsible for the crime. Spokesman Larrinaga told reporters the investigation led to evidence linking the kidnappers to organized crime. Moreno’s testimony led to the conviction of a third man in this case. Larrinaga said a possible revenge motive in this case was a line of investigation.
  • A 2005 firearm possession charge. Moreno was arrested along with two other men in 2005 as part of an investigation into a drive-by murder of a security guard. After four years of pre-trial detention, a judge ruled Moreno to be not guilty and absolved of all charges.

The statements made by State Attorney General’s spokesman were later reproached by federal officials for “criminalizing” a crime victim. The SEGOB source document is available here.

Larrinaga added that one of Nepomuceno’s sons, Gilberto Moreno, is currently being held on robbery charges. It’s unclear from the press conference audio if the son has been convicted or is being held in pre-trial detention.

According to Human Rights Watch, more than 40 percent of prisoners in Mexico are pre-trial detainees who often have to wait years before obtaining access to the court system.

Rampant impunity in Mexico is something that has been documented extensively in this blog and elsewhere. However, acquittals are not to be confused with impunity, as acquittals involve both an investigation and legal due process. That’s not to say that some suspects widely believed to be guilty have avoided jail time, but acquittals are not common in cases involving lengthy pre-trial detentions since those held for years without access to the courts are often unable to afford independent legal representation.

It is also contextually important to note that some governmental institutions in Mexico have demonstrated a pattern of stigmatizing or criminalizing victims of violent crime. Award-winning Mexican journalist Marcela Turati documented multiple cases in her book “Fuego Cruzado”.

Now for a backstory:

A person who follows me on Twitter asked me to include information about Moreno’s criminal past in my original post on his murder.

This post was written in the spirit of transparency and full disclosure and is based on the first-hand source audio of the statements made by the Sonora State Attorney General’s office.

I have included contextual information about Mexico’s pre-trial detention system since it contrasts so sharply with the legal system in the US, where most of this website’s web traffic originates.

I have neither met nor interviewed Nepomuceno Moreno and cannot make a character judgement from personal interactions. The aim of this post is to both update an earlier news item and to present direct links to the source statements and context so that readers can come to their own conclusions based on the documented evidence available.

Comments Off

Tags: , ,

Peace Activist Seeking Justice for Disappeared Son Murdered in Sonora

Posted on 29 November 2011 by admin

Peace activist Nepomuceno Moreno was shot dead in his truck Monday at an intersection in Hermosillo, Sonora. The 56 year-old was the father of a young man disappeared last year by men identified as police.

Moreno was a member of Mexico’s Movement for Peace, Justice and Dignity and was present during last month’s talks in Chapultepec Castle between drug war victims and top government officials.

During those talks, Moreno delivered a case file to officials which he said contained key evidence about those responsible for his son’s disappearance  He accused the government of inaction on the case. He said soldiers began to patrol outside of his house after he publicly linked Sonoran police to the crime.

Peace activist Julian LeBaron told Milenio television that Nepomuceno Moreno recently told him he had plans to move to Tijuana because he felt his life was in danger in Hermosillo.

Estimates for the number of disappearances in Mexico vary widely, but the peace movement puts the figure at around 10,000. Moreno’s murder illustrates why many relatives are hesitant to go public with their cases.

– Transcript of a headline filed November 29, 2011 for FSRN: http://fsrn.org/audio/headlines-tuesday-november-29-2011/9487

Comments Off

Advertise Here
Advertise Here

@syoungreports


Follow @syoungreports

Categories

RELATED SITES

 

May 2012
M T W T F S S
« Mar    
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031  

Archives