Note:  Mexico's future?  Munitions from where?
"First it was just the purchase of coca base by the Bacrim," said Gen  
Alberto Mejia.
"Now the Bacrims pay in supplies, ammunition and weapons as well, and  
the rebels protect Bacrim leaders and even train some of their men."
5 April 2011 Last updated at 04:15 ET
Colombia's criminal bands pose new security challenge
By Jeremy McDermott
BBC News, Caucasia
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-12804418
Criminal bands have forged alliances with former foes
Those that venture out in the evening in Caucasia sit with their  
backs to the wall.
It is not drive-by shootings that frighten people, although they do  
happen, but the attacks with grenades, which happen all the time.
"I get myself and my boy in the house by 6pm," said Maria Duvan, who  
sells coffee outside the mayor's office.
"The paras offer the young lads a good wage, right up until they end  
up dead."
The "paras" she speaks of are the new generation of paramilitary drug  
cartels.
The government call them Bacrims - short for criminal bands - to  
distinguish them from their paramilitary predecessors, the United  
Self-Defence Forces of Colombia (AUC).
The AUC was a right-wing umbrella group formed by landowners and drug  
traffickers in the 1990s to combat Colombia's left-wing guerrillas
Though effective in fighting the rebels, it was heavily involved in  
drug-trafficking and committed widespread human rights abuses,  
including forced displacement and massacres of civilians.
Peace postponed
The AUC demobilised in 2006 under a peace agreement with the  
government, and around 30,000 fighters surrendered their weapons.
But many paramilitaries quickly returned to what they did best:  
smuggling drugs.
And it is here in the town of Caucasia where the latest chapter in  
Colombia's drug war in being fought.
This town sits in a valley, astride the main road linking the centre  
of the country with the Caribbean coast.
The Andean mountains on either side are covered with plantations of  
coca leaf, the raw material for cocaine.
Whoever controls Caucasia, and the surrounding region of Bajo Cauca,  
controls access to the coca harvest and drug smuggling routes north  
to the Caribbean and west to the Pacific Ocean.
Two of the most powerful Bacrims - the Urabenos and the Rastrojos -  
are battling for supremacy.
The murder rate in Caucasia is 224 per 100,000 inhabitants, one of  
the highest homicides rates in the world.
On 13 March, the security forces came across 10 fresh corpses in the  
countryside outside the town, among them a child and a woman dressed  
only in her underwear.
The police believe they were somehow linked to the drug trade and had  
crossed the local Rastrojos leader, Angel de Jesus Pacheco Chancy,  
alias Sebastian.
Once a member of the AUC, he refused to turn himself in when the  
paramilitary army demobilised, allying himself with the Rastrojos as  
they sought to take control of the drug trade in the region.
Revived menace
In the fifth decade of Colombia's civil conflict, the Bacrims have  
replaced the Marxist rebels as the primary generators of violence.
Colombian soldiers are now having to train their sights on the  
Bacrims as well as guerrillas
They have also become the priority targets for the government and the  
security forces.
The area around Caucasia has become the principal focus of the armed  
forces in the whole country.
In February, Defence Minister Rodrigo Rivera launched Operation Troy  
to tackle the estimated 1,000 Barcrim members who operate here.
An extra 1,000 police and 3,000 soldiers have saturated the region.
So far they have made some low-level arrests, but the violence  
continues.
Driving into the town one has to pass through military checkpoints.
The young soldiers keep a grip on their rifles while one man searches  
the passengers and the vehicle.
Once in the town, it is the police who conduct random searches in the  
street.
New alliance?
Colombian authorities now regard criminal bands as the major threat
While the Bacrims fight for control of the lowlands, in the  
mountains, sitting on the coca fields, are the Marxist rebels of the  
Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (Farc) and the smaller  
National Liberation Army (ELN).
Just over a decade ago they were locked in a battle to the death with  
the paramilitaries of the AUC.
Now they happily sell coca base, which is then processed into  
cocaine, to the Bacrims.
The guerrillas are beginning to enter into agreements and even  
alliances with them, united by their common interest in the drug  
trade and in resisting the advance of the security forces.
"First it was just the purchase of coca base by the Bacrim," said Gen  
Alberto Mejia.
"Now the Bacrims pay in supplies, ammunition and weapons as well, and  
the rebels protect Bacrim leaders and even train some of their men."
The new chapter of Colombia's civil conflict has begun, with rebels,  
paramilitaries and drug cartels working together to traffic cocaine.
Much of the cocaine is now trafficked through Mexico, fuelling a  
violence there reminiscent of Colombia almost 20 years ago, when  
Pablo Escobar of the Medellin drug cartel took on the state, and  
almost won.
 
 
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