Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Mexican President Condemns New Immigration Law

(Posted by Uriel Rivera)

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/apr/27/arizona-immigration-law


The Mexican president, Felipe Calderón, has condemned Arizona's new immigration law and warned that relations with the border state will suffer as a result.

The law, which gives the police the right to stop anyone they suspect is an illegal immigrant, "opens the door to intolerance, hate, discrimination and abuse in law enforcement", Calderón said last night. Trade and political ties with Arizona would be "seriously affected", he warned.

"Nobody can sit around with their arms crossed in the face of decisions that so clearly affect our countrymen," Calderón said in a speech at the Institute for Mexicans Abroad.

His comments came as the furore over the law escalated, with calls growing in the US for a boycott of hotels, convention centres and other economic targets in Arizona.

Opponents of the legislation say it will lead to victimisation of anyone who looks or sounds Latino. Supporters say the legislation is needed because the state can no longer cope with an estimated 450,000 illegal immigrants.

Monday, April 12, 2010

Mexican Officials Criticizes U.S. Hate Crimes

Mexico City, Federal District, Mexico (AHN) - A Mexican government official is complaining publicly about what he says is an alarming increase in hate crimes against Hispanic people in the United States.

Daniel Hernandez Joseph, director of Mexico's Protection for Mexicans Abroad program, says some American authorities are fostering practices that he was quoted as saying were "denigrating and unacceptable" toward Hispanics.

He mentioned FBI statistics that show a more than 40 percent increase in hate crimes against Hispanics in less than a decade.

Click here for more


Posted by Cynthia Sanchez



Friday, March 26, 2010

Calderon's dead-end war

(Posted by Uriel Rivera)

In Ciudad Juarez this month, Mexican President Felipe Calderon insisted that appearances notwithstanding, drug violence had begun to recede thanks to the yearlong presence of 10,000 Mexican troops in the border city.

Yet according to his own government's figures, there have been 536 executions in Juarez since Jan. 1, which is 100 more than during the same period last year.

And the violence is not localized to a few border towns like Juarez. Over a holiday weekend in Acapulco this month, 34 people were assassinated in drug-related incidents; nearly 20 suffered the same fate in the drug-producing state of Sinaloa; and perhaps most poignant, two graduate students from Mexico's premier private university, Monterrey Tech, lost their lives March 19, victims of crossfire as the Mexican military pursued drug cartel members at the entrance to the campus.



http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-castaneda25-2010mar25,0,5018841.story

Monday, March 8, 2010

Cartels use intimidation campaign to stifle news coverage in Mexico

12:00 AM CST on Monday, March 8, 2010
By ALFREDO CORCHADO / The Dallas Morning News
acorchado@dallasnews.com

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Cartels use intimidation campaign to stifle news coverage in Mexico

12:00 AM CST on Monday, March 8, 2010
By ALFREDO CORCHADO / The Dallas Morning News
acorchado@dallasnews.com

REYNOSA, Mexico – In the days since a long-simmering dispute erupted into open warfare between the Gulf drug cartel and its former enforcers, the Zetas, censorship of news developments has reached unprecedented dimensions along much of Mexico's border with Texas. A virtual news blackout has been imposed, several sources said, enforced by threats, abductions and attacks against journalists.

In the past 14 days, at least eight Mexican journalists have been abducted in the Reynosa area, which is across the border from McAllen. One died after a severe beating, according to reports that could not be independently verified. Two were released by their captors. The rest are missing.

Even by the vicious standards of Mexico's drug cartels, which have made Mexico one of the most dangerous countries in the world for journalists, the intimidation campaign is more far-reaching – and more effective – than other attempts to squelch media coverage of cartel activities, industry and law enforcement sources say. It is virtually impossible to safely report or verify, or even ask questions.

http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/news/world/stories/DN-blackout_08int.ART.State.Edition2.4b84845.html


[Posted By Michael Felix]

© 2010, The Dallas Morning News, Inc. All Rights Reserved.




Clinton Presses Region to Recognize Honduras

MEXICO CITY — Secretary of State Hillary Clinton ended a five-day tour of Latin America Friday with a lightning trip to Guatemala, where she promised Central American presidents more help to fightdrug trafficking and repeated her call for more countries to recognize the new government of Honduras.

The new Honduran president, Porfirio Lobo, attended the meeting in Guatemala City, an appearance that signaled a step toward normalizing relations with neighbors El Salvador and Guatemala.

[Posted by Brenda Diaz]

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/06/world/americas/06clinton.html?ref=americas

Sunday, March 7, 2010

Mexican authorities find tunnel at federal facility

— Images from a video surveillance camera led Mexican authorities to a suspected smuggling tunnel under construction in Tijuana inside a guarded federal customs facility at the Otay Mesa border crossing, authorities said yesterday.


Posted by Alex Sobieski

Study: County’s immigrant Latinos have highest self-employment rate

Combined regional census and federal economic data show that in San Diego County, Latino immigrants have a higher rate of self-employment than that of nonimmigrant Latinos and even native-born U.S. citizens, according to a new report.

http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/2010/jan/27/study-countys-immigrant-latinos-have-highest-self/

Posted by Alex Sobieski

Vehicle checks at border paying off Authorities seize cash, guns bound for Mexico

— Last spring, U.S. officials announced a $400 million effort to tighten border security, this time with an emphasis on southbound inspections of vehicles headed into Mexico to check for contraband cash and firearms.


Posted by Alex Sobieski

Drug smugglers’ creativity grows

Hidden among truckloads of peppers, bananas, toilet paper and medical supplies entering from Mexico, customs officers have been finding another type of import.


 Driver Juan Madero looked on at the Otay Mesa Port of Entry last week as an agriculture specialist inspected a box of cilantro.

NELVIN C. CEPEDA / UNION-TRIBUNE

Driver Juan Madero looked on at the Otay Mesa Port of Entry last week as an agriculture specialist inspected a box of cilantro.

 Driver Juan Madero looked on at the Otay Mesa Port of Entry last week as an agriculture specialist inspected a box of cilantro.

PHOTO BY NELVIN C. CEPEDA - UNION-TRIBUNE

At the Otay Mesa cargo port, U.S. Customs and Border Protection inspector Eiichiro Ninmiya checked loads of goods last week with his partner, Cora.

http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/2010/feb/15/drug-smugglers-creativity-grows/


Posted by Alex Sobieski

Baja village has become smugglers’ launch point


Popotla’s activity and proximity to the border make it an attractive spot for smugglers to take to the sea with their human cargo, U.S. and Mexican officials say.

PEGGY PEATTIE / UNION-TRIBUNE

Popotla’s activity and proximity to the border make it an attractive spot for smugglers to take to the sea with their human cargo, U.S. and Mexican officials say

http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/2010/mar/01/baja-village-has-become-smugglers-launch-point/


Posted by Alex Sobieski

Disminuyen las remesas

Disminuyen las remesas

Washington/EFE — Las transferencias de dinero de inmigrantes de América Latina y el Caribe a sus países cayeron un 15% en 2009, hasta los 58,800 millones de dólares, debido a la crisis económica en países como EE.UU., España y Japón.

Según un informe publicado por el Banco Interamericano de Desarrollo (BID), la recuperación de estas transferencias durante el último trimestre de 2009 y las estadísticas de empleo y migración revelan una estabilización del envío de dinero.

[ Zelene Valencia]

http://www.impre.com/laopinion/inmigracion/2010/3/7/disminuyen-las-remesas-176864-1.html


Thursday, March 4, 2010

Drug war clashes between Gulf cartel, Zetas may escalate, could affect North Texas

08:36 AM CST on Monday, March 1, 2010

By ALFREDO CORCHADO / The Dallas Morning News


NUEVO LAREDO – Longstanding tensions between the Zetas paramilitary group and their old employers, the Gulf drug cartel, have exploded into a full-blown war, worrying U.S. and Mexican law enforcement officials that a likely protracted battle will further threaten this stretch of the Texas-Mexico border. Parts of it are already under heightened security.

The resumption in violence shatters a three-year uneasy truce in this region and represents a potential menace to places such as North Texas where the Zetas and a rival drug trafficking organization known as La Familia are entrenched, according to a U.S. intelligence official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/news/texassouthwest/stories/030110dnintdrugwar.416aff8.html

© 2010, The Dallas Morning News, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

[Posted By Michael Felix]

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Drug smugglers’ creativity grows

Drug smugglers’ creativity grows

Produce truckers increasingly used

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2010 AT 12:04 A.M.

http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/2010/feb/15/drug-smugglers-creativity-grows

Hidden among truckloads of peppers, bananas, toilet paper and medical supplies entering from Mexico, customs officers have been finding another type of import.

With drug cartels becoming increasingly creative in evading border authorities, it has become commonplace to find drugs embedded among the truckloads of goods that move each day through the nation’s ports of entry. Two weeks ago, inspectors at the Otay Mesa cargo port found more than 3,800 pounds of marijuana hidden in a shipment of peppers and green beans. A few days later, they found a ton of pot stashed in a load of bananas.


{Posted by Alex Sobieski}

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Mexican President Calderon to return to violence-plagued Juarez

Mexican President Calderon to return to violence-plagued Juarez

By Nick Valencia, CNN
February 16, 2010 9:55 p.m. EST


CNN) -- Mexican President Felipe Calderon will return to Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua, for the second time in as many weeks on Wednesday morning, a spokesman for the municipal police department said.
"For security reasons, details are nonexistent," police department spokesman Jacinto Seguro said.
Calderon will attend a meeting with local, state and federal officials, as well as civic and human rights groups, on Wednesday in Ciudad Juarez, which has been plagued by violence stemming from drug cartels.
The January 31 killings in southern Juarez of 15 people, most of whom were students with no ties to organized crime, has sparked outrage across the country. The slayings, which occurred at a house party, are thought to be the result of bad intelligence by a cartel and the gang that carried out the killings.

[Posted by Brenda Diaz]

Mexican police find 5 decapitated men in drug cartel-plagued state of Sinaloa

CULIACAN, Mexico (AP) — Mexican authorities have found the decapitated bodies of five men in a western state known for drug-gang violence.Sinaloa state prosecutors spokesman Martin Gastelum says the bodies and heads were found Tuesday in front of a primary school in the town of Escuinapa.He says two of the heads were missing their ears and two more had a "Z'' carved on their backs in an apparent reference to the Zetas drug gang.The Zetas have been involved in some of the bloodiest confrontations in a drug war that has cost more than 15,000 lives in Mexico in three years.Sinaloa is the birthplace of the leaders of several drug cartels. The Zetas are based is the border state of Tamaulipas across from Texas.

[Posted by Julia Martinez]

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Nuevas normas para visas de trabajo

WASHINGTON/AP — El gobierno estadounidense propuso aumentar los salarios y reforzar las medidas de seguridad en el trabajo de los braceros agrícolas temporales, alterando la política de su predecesor que según los sindicatos fomentaba la mano de obra barata en detrimento de la contratación de estadounidenses.

El Departamento del Trabajo propuso normas que, entre otras cosas, requeriría a los terratenientes agrícolas esforzarse en contratar mano de obra nacional para las tareas de recolección antes que acudir a los braceros extranjeros. En los últimos años miles de braceros extranjeros han sido contratados con ese fin.

www.impre.com/inmigracion/2010/2/14/nuevas-normas-para-visas-de-tr-173222-1.html

[Posted By Zelene Valencia]

Monday, February 1, 2010

Massacre in Juarez, Mexico

This article is about the massacre that occurred in Juarez on Sunday, January 31.

I chose this article because while it is important to remember such tragedies to help prevent them in the future, I also thought how the article refused to blatantly point fingers at the drug cartels as the perpetrators was interesting. I related it to the article we read, entitled "The Fall of Mexico". For me it was educational because my idea of Mexico is one devoid of the concept of drug cartels, which is an ignorance that needs to be corrected.

In conclusion, the article is mainly composed of interviews from people who witnessed the massacre, and also interesting facts about various drug cartels in Mexico.


Holly Bartow
Chicano 70, Spring 2010

Ciudad Juarez police baffled by shooting of teens

(Posted By Uriel Rivera)

The attack on a party attended by mostly high school and college students in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, has "no apparent motive," the mayor says. The death toll rises to 16.

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Schwarzenegger asks: Why not build prisons in Mexico?

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

By Kevin Yamamura / Sacramento Bee

http://www.sacbee.com/topstories/story/2489099.html

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger on Monday offered yet another way California can save on incarcerating illegal immigrants: pay to build prisons in Mexico...read more

© Copyright The Sacramento Bee. All rights reserved.

[Posted by Michael Felix]

Monday, January 25, 2010

Mexico Drug Cartel Violence Soaring

Vicious cartels are battling to control the $14 billion a year illicit trade feeding an insatiable U.S. appetite for drugs. Mexican authorities are hitting the cartels with all they have.

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2009/02/11/eveningnews/main4794054.shtml

[Posted By Cynthia Sanchez]

Mexican ruling party proposes banning drug ballads

By Catherine E. Shoichet / Associated Press Writer

http://www.kvia.com/Global/story.asp?S=11877561

MEXICO CITY (AP) - A new proposal from Mexico's ruling party could send musicians to prison for performing songs that glorify drug trafficking.

The law would bring prison sentences of up to three years for people who perform or produce songs or movies glamorizing criminals.

"Society sees drug ballads as nice, pleasant, inconsequential and harmless, but they are the opposite," National Action Party lawmaker Oscar Martin Arce told The Associated Press on Thursday.

The ballads, known as "narcocorridos," often describe drug trafficking and violence, and are popular among some norteno bands.

After some killings, gangs pipe narcocorridos into police radio scanners, along with threatening messages.

Martin said his party's proposal, presented before Congress on Wednesday, also takes aim at low-budget movies praising drug lords.

It was unclear when lawmakers would vote on it.

"We cannot accept it as normal. We cannot exalt these people because they themselves are distributing these materials among youths to lead them into a lifestyle where the bad guy wins," he said.

Martin said the proposal's intention is not to limit free expression, but to stop such performances from inciting crimes.

But Elijah Wald, author of the book, "Narcocorrido: A Journey into the Music of Drugs, Guns, and Guerrillas," said politicians are attempting to censor artists rather than attacking Mexico's real problems.

On his Web site, Wald has posted descriptions of dozens of past efforts to stop the songs, including radio broadcast bans and politicians' proposals.

"It is very hard to stop the drug trafficking," he said. "It is very easy to get your name in the papers by attacking famous musicians."

The norteno band Los Tigres del Norte canceled their planned appearance at an awards ceremony at a government-owned auditorium in October after organizers allegedly asked the group not to perform their latest drug ballad.

Mexican President Felipe Calderon launched a nationwide crackdown on drug cartels in late 2006, deploying tens of thousands of soldiers and federal police across Mexico.

Even performers who don't sing drug ballads have been caught up in recent raids.

In December Mexican authorities arrested Latin Grammy winner Ramon Ayala at a drug cartel's party in a gated community of mansions outside the central mountain town of Tepoztlan.

Ayala's attorney has said the accordionist and his band, Los Bravos del Norte, did not know their clients were suspected members of the Beltran Leyva cartel.

Greg Etter, an assistant professor of criminal justice at the University of Central Missouri, said he agrees that narcocorridos promote violence.

"It affects their view of social normality, and that's what makes it dangerous," he said.

Martin said an alleged murderer recently told police he first got involved in organized crime because he liked the songs and wanted one to be composed about him one day.

But Etter said bands have been singing narcocorridos for more than 30 years, and legislators can't stop such a strong musical tradition.

"I don't see how you could put a lid on it," he said. "Yes, these are dangerous. Music affects emotion and emotion affects actions. But if they suppress it, won't it make it even more popular?"

----

Associated Press Writer Carlos Rodriguez contributed to this report.

(Copyright 2010 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)

**Posted by Alex Sobieski**

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Narco Mexico

Wednesday, January 20, 2010
Mexico Crime Compendium: January 18-20
COMMENT
When a radiographic map of DTO influence is examined (e.g.
http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2009/03/22/us/BORDER.html), it’s
obvious that the Sinaloa DTO remains the number 1 player among
Mexico's drug enterprises. The Sinaloa DTO has become the primary
enemy and target for other DTO’s, but remains suprisingly immune and
relatively untouched by any government initiatives or interventions.
Edgardo Buscaglia’s comments in La Jornada make this argument (http://
www.jornada.unam.mx/2010/01/14/index.php?section=politica&article=012n1pol&partner=rss).
He made similar observations in a detailed interview reported in The
Economist (http://www.economist.com/world/americas/displaystory.cfm?
story_id=15213785) and the same article includes his calculated
estimates that there have been 53, 174 drug related arrests during the
previous 6 years — with only a miniscule 941 (1.7% of the total)
affecting the Sinaloa DTO directly.
Similar argument about the “intocable” Sinaloa DTO are found and
documented throughout Ricardo Ravelo’s book Herencia Maldita
(DeBosillo, 2009).
The fact that El Chapo Guzman has been free for 9 years after his
prison escape (http://www.noroeste.com.mx/publicaciones.php?
id=549284&id_seccion=145&fecha=2010-01-19
) and that Ismael “El Mayo”
Zambada and Ignacio “Nacho” Coronel Villareal remain untouched and
mysteriously anonymous also supports Edgardo Buscaglia’s
interpretation.

[Posted by Professor Montejano]

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

The Fall of Mexico

Reporting by Philip Caputo; photos by Julian Cardona.

http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200912/mexico-drugs

Foreign Affairs
December 2009

In the almost three years since President Felipe Calderón launched a
war on drug cartels, border towns in Mexico have turned into halls of
mirrors where no one knows who is on which side or what chance remark
could get you murdered. Some 14,000 people have been killed in that
time—the worst carnage since the Mexican Revolution—and part of the
country is effectively under martial law. Is this evidence of a
creeping coup by the military? A war between drug cartels? Between the
president and his opposition? Or just collateral damage from the (U.S.-
supported) war on drugs? Nobody knows: Mexico is where facts, like
people, simply disappear. The stakes for the U.S. are high, especially
as the prospect of a failed state on our southern border begins to
seem all too real.

by Philip Caputo
The Fall of Mexico

FOR THE FULL TEXT:

http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200912/mexico-drugs

[Posted by Professor Montejano]