Wednesday, December 08, 2010

OUR SOUTHERN NEIGHBOR IS SELF-DESTRUCTING

The fruits of a society in which a small ultra-rich class feeds off the poverty-stricken masses. The Mexican military is barely able to cope with the drug cartel warfare. Can you imagine what would happen to Mexico if those cartels stopped fighting each other?

THE SECOND MEXICAN REVOLUTION

Borderland Beat
December 6, 2010

Voces Del Periodista #247
10,000 muertos y no se inmutan
RAMI SCHWART
http://www.vocesdelperiodista.com.mx/index.php/component/content/article/1249.html

Not since the Mexican Revolution 100 years ago has Mexcio suffered violence like that which is sweeping the country in 2010. According to the newspaper Reforma, 10,000 men, women and children have been executed from January through the end of October in 2010, more than in all six years of the Vicente Fox administration and almost as many as in 2008 and 2009 together.

If we continue at this rate we will end this year with over 12,000 executions linked to organized crime and that does not include the thousands of missing whose bodies will never be found.

Forty Five percent of these murders occurred in two states: Chihuahua, with 2,797 executions, and Sinaloa with 1,795. Guerrero followed with 786 executions, Durango with 700, and Tamaulipas with 653 dead, all of these linked to organized crime.

Many cities and states are breaking all records of violence. Such is the case of Nuevo Leon, Tijuana and Mexico City.

Only one state has been spared, Yucatan, and even states that in previous years were free of this violence are now engulfed. Such is the case of Tlaxcala, Baja California Sur, Campeche and Aguascalientes. Although officials deny it and say that violence is concentrated in a few areas, the reality is that it has reached all corners of the country.

In Chihuahua, where the Army has replaced the police in anti-organized crime operations within most of the state, there have been 2,800 excutions recorded so far this year. The state will end the year with more than 3,000 executions.

In 2007, Chihuahua reported 148 executions, an average of one every two and half days. This year, the rate of killings in the state has grown to almost ten per day.

Nuevo León, once a symbol of progress and tranquility, has suffered 524 executions through the end of October, double the number of those recorded in the previous three years combined(2007 thru 2009).

In Tamaulipas the figure for 2010 is three times higher than in the previous three years combined.

Sinaloa, traditionally the bloodiest state in Mexico, will likely end the year with more than 2,000 executions, almost as much as the three previous years combined.

And so on and on. Sonora, Baja California Sur, Coahuila, San Luis Potosi, Nayarit, Jalisco, Colima, State of Mexico, Morelos, Puebla, Queretaro, Oaxaca, Chiapas and Quintana Roo have all broken records for executions in the first 10 months of 2010.

Mexico City, Veracruz, Hidalgo and Campeche will beat their records by the end of the year.

The Reforma newspaper said that for the first ten months of 2010 52 of those executed are military, 637 were federal, state and municipal police, 798 people were tortured, decapitaded and/or dismembered. 674 executions were accompanied by “narco” banners containing threats or claims by rival criminal groups.

And there have been at least 25 mass murders with more than ten victims.

The violence has victimized hundreds of innocent women and children. So far this year nearly 700 women have died as a result of the rampant violence in our country. And there are also hundreds of deaths of those the government calls "collateral damage" ranging from children on holiday to patients in drug rehabilitation centers and innocent civilians killed at military checkpoints, and even some killed by stray bullets.

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