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Author: Subject: Tijuana: In the cartels' shadow
sanluquëna
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[*] posted on 8-8-2008 at 05:56 PM
Tijuana: In the cartels' shadow


http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/crossing_continents/75...

Quote:
In Tijuana armoured military vehicles patrol the streets.

This border city is one of the focal points for Mexico's battle against the country's powerful and violent drugs cartels.

According to the US government, the flow of narcotics to the US from Mexico is worth nearly $14bn (£7bn) a year.

Much of that illicit merchandise passes through Tijuana - the busiest border crossing point to the US, the world's largest market for drugs.

Spreading south


But tighter border controls have pushed Mexico's cartels into developing the domestic drug market.

"There are over 20,000 tienditas, or little shops, throughout the city where people can buy drugs," says local human rights activist, Victor Clark Alfaro.

"It's like a tsunami spreading from the border down to the south of Mexico."

We accompanied Victor as he drove to work with his bodyguard.

He has needed protection since the 1990s when he denounced links between some government employees and the cartels.

Death threats followed.

"Tijuana has an estimated 200,000 drug addicts - the highest level of drug addiction in Mexico", he says.

Of those newly and recently addicted, thousands are believed to be children and teenagers.

"I have seen as much as a 300% increase in the number of children coming to our centre for treatment," says Jose Ramon Arreola, one of the directors of a local rehabilitation centre, CIRAD.

"It's in the interest of the drug dealers to get these kids hooked on drugs early."


Turf wars

He believes children - some as young as eight or nine - have become a vital part of the growing domestic market for the cartels. And it is not only because they are consumers.

"The drug pushers use kids to sell drugs on the streets because they don't draw as much attention from the police," he says.

Nancy - not her real name - started taking drugs at 13. She was a regular user of marijuana, cocaine, crystal meth and various pills before she came to CIRAD.

"I was selling drugs not for profit but simply so that I could afford the drugs I needed," she tells us.

Guns and violence were the norm in her life.

"I was exposed to shoot-outs, because there would be conflicts with other dealers over turf. I was also asked to hide weapons for the man I worked for."

Nearly 1,500 people, including some 400 police officers and other public officials, have been killed this year in Mexico as the cartels battle each other - and the state - for control of the drugs trade.

Of those, 260 have lost their lives in Tijuana, many of them in bloody shoot-outs.


Death threats

The power wielded by the cartels is very real. Nancy didn't want to be identified for fear she or her family might become the victims of reprisals.


Journalists who report on the cartels are also forced to confront that fear.

The press freedoms organisation, Reporters Without Borders, has classified Mexico as the second most dangerous place in the world for journalists after Iraq.

Over breakfast one morning in Tijuana a local journalist tells me about the threats that have been made against him in 20 years reporting from Tijuana.

Odilon Garcia expresses an almost visceral outrage at the cartels' lack of respect for human life, and especially for the impact the culture of violence is having on children.

"What kind of kids can we expect to raise with this kind of violence?" he asks me before sharing an anecdote about a recent encounter with a young boy.

The boy had been excited to meet Odilon after seeing him on TV.

He was even more excited by the story Odilon was reporting on: the gruesome decapitation of four people.

To Odilon, this child represented a depressing loss of innocence, an example of the depths to which respect for life has plunged in Mexico.

In an effort to break the power of the drugs cartels, President Felipe Calderon has deployed more than 25, 000 troops on the streets - 3,000 of them to Tijuana and the state of Baja California.

"The army is a necessary, temporary solution," Odilon tells me.

"But the real solution is going to require a change in the way we live here in Mexico, a greater understanding of our reality, a change in the way we think.

"That's going to be the big, big fight in Mexico."
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Bruce R Leech
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[*] posted on 8-8-2008 at 06:53 PM


Bummer:no:



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CaboRon
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[*] posted on 8-9-2008 at 10:39 AM


This is not new ..... TJ has always been the armpit of Mexico, right up there with Nuevo Larado .... it has been a corrupt town for at least the fifty years that I have been going there.

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Woooosh
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[*] posted on 8-10-2008 at 08:37 AM


Quote:
Originally posted by CaboRon
This is not new ..... TJ has always been the armpit of Mexico, right up there with Nuevo Larado .... it has been a corrupt town for at least the fifty years that I have been going there.

CaboRon


An armpit no deodorant can freshen or keep from getting vile and rank again.

If you get the Army involved they will just move the children from drugs and into prostitution.

[Edited on 8-10-2008 by Woooosh]




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loki
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[*] posted on 8-10-2008 at 12:23 PM


Ron,

I might be wrong but its my understanding that every major city and law enforcement agency in northern Mexico has had its chief of police and/or subcommanders murdered since last fall. That would include all federal law enforcement agencies.
The armed forces now patrol most northern cities and are not able to beat down the drug terrorists as they do not have the resources that the cartels do.
You are very lucky you live where you do as the cartels have not decided to make your area a playground of death as they have done in the north.
The mexican Government will not really win this battle until the drug terrorists start to cause a disruption of tourist dollars in Cabo and the other really important areas.

[Edited on 8-10-2008 by loki]




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[*] posted on 8-10-2008 at 12:38 PM


Why would there be a problem for Cabo? It's half owned by Euro dirty money. Clean and sweet!



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loki
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[*] posted on 8-10-2008 at 01:12 PM


They are positioning themselves for the casinos which are coming soon. You think Vegas and Atlantic City were fun in the 60s and 70s. Wait until the casinos open in the Mexican resorts. Its going to happen as there is mucho money available to pay off any naysayers.



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[*] posted on 8-10-2008 at 03:56 PM


Quote:
Originally posted by loki
They are positioning themselves for the casinos which are coming soon. You think Vegas and Atlantic City were fun in the 60s and 70s. Wait until the casinos open in the Mexican resorts. Its going to happen as there is mucho money available to pay off any naysayers.


I think full-on casinos require a change to the Mexican constitution... I'm sure Hank Rohn is taking care of it.

Gaming was all about Cuba until Kennedy, Vegas was king until 2006, Macau China took the #1 spot from Vegas in 2006.

The problem with winning in a Mexican casino would be getting back out of the country alive with your winnings.

[Edited on 8-10-2008 by Woooosh]




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loki
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[*] posted on 8-10-2008 at 05:06 PM


That would require the casinos to allow you to win. They would not want to share the money with the banditos.:lol:



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[*] posted on 8-10-2008 at 06:00 PM


Loki and Whoooosh,

What do you consider to be a full-on casino? This year Juega y Juega opened in Salagua, north Manzanillo. They have slot machines, but I didn't notice any card tables.

According to the web they have 9 locations.
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[*] posted on 8-10-2008 at 06:33 PM


Quote:
Originally posted by stanburn
Loki and Whoooosh,

What do you consider to be a full-on casino? This year Juega y Juega opened in Salagua, north Manzanillo. They have slot machines, but I didn't notice any card tables.

According to the web they have 9 locations.


Full on casinos are a one stop shop for card table games (poker, poker variations, 21, bacarat), games of chance (wheel of fortune, roulette, bingo, keno) and mechanical or electronic slot machine devices. A bingo parlor is not it, a card room is not it, a slot machine house is not it.

Not every gaming market has the same consumer demands. Vegas is primarily mechanical slot machine and blackjack driven, Macau is electronic slots and bacarat.

consumer beware notice: Slot machines pay out their advertised payout ("our machines pay out 98%! )over a cycle of 200,000 pulls of the handle. The machine really doesn't care if it takes your money 1,000 times in a row or pays you out 1,000 times in a row so long as it performs to the installed chips pre-determined percentage over 200,000 pulls. In non-indian USA markets you will find published slot machine (and table game) payout percentages for each denomination of machine in "gambler guides" for the area.

Indian gaming in the USA is not so regulated, either are the machines in China or most-likely Mexico. They can set them at any percentage they want without disclosure. I doubt Mexico will want to set up a regulatory body now with everything else going on.

[Edited on 8-11-2008 by Woooosh]




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[*] posted on 8-10-2008 at 07:09 PM


Whoosh,

Thanks for the pimer.

Stan
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