Time
By Ioan Grillo and Dolly Mascareñas / Nezahualcóyotl
Feb. 25, 2013
The gunshots at dawn woke residents of the cinder block homes in Nezahualcóyotl, a working-class city on the edge of the Mexican capital, making a few people duck for cover behind their beds. When they finally peered out their windows, they saw the corpses of two young men, one stacked over the other, besides a threatening note written on cardboard and signed by the drug cartel called La Familia. The double murder, which took place on Feb. 16, was the latest in a series of killings that have brought the drug war to the edges of Mexico City – the mountain capital that has long been viewed as a safe haven from cartel violence ravaging other parts of Mexico.
Recently installed President Enrique Peña Nieto hopes to reverse this trend with a new anti crime strategy – transforming poor neighborhoods like Nezahualcóyotl where cartels make their bastions and preventing young people from joining their criminal armies. On Feb. 12, Peña Nieto announced there would be more than $9 billion for crime prevention aimed at 57 hotspots. “We must put special emphasis on prevention, because we can’t only keep employing more sophisticated weapons, better equipment, more police, a higher presence of the armed forces in the country as the only form of combating organized crime,” Peña Nieto said. Rather than just shooting or incarcerating the seemingly endless ranks of cartel gunmen, the president hopes to stop young people from becoming assassins in the first place. Read more.
The MexicoBlog of the Americas Program, a fiscally sponsored program of the Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR), is written by Laura Carlsen. I monitor and analyze international press on Mexico, with a focus on security, immigration, human rights and social movements for peace and justice, from a feminist perspective. And sometimes I simply muse.
Showing posts with label youth drug culture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label youth drug culture. Show all posts
Nov 20, 2012
Border Patrol agents hope program will stop teens from working with cartel
ABC15 CASA GRANDE, AZ - Border Patrol agents are hoping a program called Operation Detour will teach teens to say no to the cartel.
The program is similar to D.A.R.E., Drug Abuse Resistance Education, an earlier program also targeted at teens.
In the case of Operation Detour, teens are being warned not to do any work for the cartel.
Cartel members are believed to be targeting teens who can drive to transport drugs across the border for thousands of dollars.
In 2008, the Tucson sector Border Patrol arrested 111 teens connected to trafficking. So far this year 371 teens have been arrested.
"Kids think they can get some easy cash. But what they are getting is either time in jail or a death sentence, if they work with the cartel," said Border Patrol Agent Shelton McKenzie. Read more.
The program is similar to D.A.R.E., Drug Abuse Resistance Education, an earlier program also targeted at teens.
In the case of Operation Detour, teens are being warned not to do any work for the cartel.
Cartel members are believed to be targeting teens who can drive to transport drugs across the border for thousands of dollars.
In 2008, the Tucson sector Border Patrol arrested 111 teens connected to trafficking. So far this year 371 teens have been arrested.
"Kids think they can get some easy cash. But what they are getting is either time in jail or a death sentence, if they work with the cartel," said Border Patrol Agent Shelton McKenzie. Read more.
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