The Drones of Mexico
From FNS News.
"Whether legally or illegally, more drones are piercing Mexican airspace. Joining Tijuana in the club of drones, Chihuahua state is expected to deploy
the technology soon for law enforcement purposes.
Chihuahua State Prosecutor Jorge Gonzalez Nicolas told the local press this month that his agency has acquired four drones which will be assigned to
each of the corresponding sub-divisions of the state prosecutor’s office, including the branch located in the border city of Ciudad Juarez. According
to Gonzalez, the unmanned aircraft will buzz the sky once personnel are thoroughly trained to operate them.
While the Mexican law enforcement official did not specify the cost or origin of the drones, he did describe the machines’ capabilities.
“These drones have cameras that send us an image in real time and an x-ray apparatus for telling how many people are inside a building, thanks to the
emissions of body heat,” Gonzalez said.
The drones will be linked to a new telecommunications network (built with U.S. assistance) that is being constructed across the state and coordinated
by emergency response and state law enforcement headquarters in Chihuahua City.
Nationally, security agencies already using drones include the Mexican Defense Ministry, the national intelligence agency CISEN and the Mexican Navy,
which reportedly has manufactured its own drone software and developed a model craft. Overall, the Mexican market for drones jumped seven times from
2013 to 2014, Mario Aurelio Gonzalez, director and founder of the private company HelioBoss Latinoamerica, said earlier this year.
In May Tijuana’s police premiered their three drones, which resemble small helicopters, at the city’s annual Cinco de Mayo parade. Following the
festivities, the drones patrolled the border city’s historic downtown. Last month, Eduardo Hernandez Velez, public safety chief for the Baja
California city of Ensenada, announced that his agency would acquire three drones of its own.
The Mexico City daily El Universal, meanwhile, recently ran a piece about the use of drones for drug smuggling. El Universal reported that drones
packed with illegal drugs have flown across the Mexico-U.S. border since at least 2011.
Citing an unnamed source from the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, the article said numerous, large shipments of cocaine and other drugs have
been transported across the border, with some seizures made by U.S. law enforcement authorities.
Foreign-made drones used to transport drugs, mainly of Israeli manufacture, were purportedly replaced by Mexican-made ones this year. According to El
Universal, both U.S. and Mexican drug law enforcement officials suspect the drones are being assembled in Mexico City, Queretaro, Guadalajara, and the
state of Nuevo Leon, which includes the large industrial city of Monterrey.
The drones are among technological innovations employed in drug trafficking, including ultra-light aircraft, sophisticated underground tunnels and
submarines.
Quoted by El Universal, a U.S. attorney and drug war observer identified as John Davidson, characterized the drones as the “perfect mules,” since the
pilotless aircraft can be operated with far less personal risk to smugglers and even re-used to transport the profits of illicit enterprise back
across the border to Mexico."
Sources: El Universal, July 9, 2014. El Diario de Juarez, July 4, 2014. Article by Luz del Carmen Sosa. Ensenada.net, June 8, 2014. Article by
Karla Lorena Lamas. Elvigia.net/Agencia Reforma, May 7, 2014. La Jornada/Notimex, April 9, 2014. El Financiero/Notimex, February 16, 2014.
Frontera NorteSur: on-line, U.S.-Mexico border news
Center for Latin American and Border Studies
New Mexico State University
Las Cruces, New Mexico
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