Tuesday, September 27, 2011

AZMEX POLICY 27-9-11

AZMEX POLICY 27 SEP 2011

Note: As the situation continues to deteriorate. "In every country
that has been studied throughout history, when they have faced this
kind of institutional decadence, society has adopted private
mechanisms of protection that give rise to paramilitary forces,"

Mexico rejects video call to exterminate cartel
MARK STEVENSON,Associated Press
Posted: 09/27/2011 07:14:15 AM MDT
http://www.elpasotimes.com/newupdated/ci_18983809

MEXICO CITY (AP) - The Mexican government said it is investigating
videos posted on the Internet in which a gang of masked men vow to
exterminate the violent Zetas drug cartel, and said it opposes such
vigilante methods.
At least two videos have been posted by a group believed linked to
the powerful Sinaloa cartel that calls itself the "Mata Zetas," or
"Zetas Killers." The Zetas were founded by deserters from an elite
military unit and are known for their brutality.
In the most recent video, posted over the weekend, the group says it
is attacking the Zetas because people are tired of the gang's
kidnappings and extortion.
"We are the armed wing of the people, and for the people," says a man
with a ski mask, who is seen in the video sitting at a table with
four other masked associates and reading from a prepared statement.
"We are anonymous warriors, with faces, but proudly Mexican." The
speaker said his group was prohibited by its ethical code from
carrying out kidnappings or extortion.
No group has formally claimed responsibility for that video, but the
language and style of the declaration were similar to a video
released in July, in which about two dozen armed men claimed to be
"Mata Zetas" from the Jalisco Nueva Generacion cartel, or New
Generation cartel, a group linked to the Sinaloa cartel.
The Interior Department said in a statement Monday night that the
Attorney General's office "has opened an investigation into the
videos that express the
aforementioned ideas and are circulating on the Internet."
"While it is true that the criminal organization known as the Zetas
should be defeated, that must occur by legal means and never by
methods outside the law," the statement said.
While Mexican video-sharing sites and blogs frequently feature
alleged statements by cartels, the "Mata Zetas" videos are being
taken more seriously after a gang dumped 35 bound, seminude, tortured
bodies on a busy avenue in front of horrified motorists in the Gulf
coast city of Veracruz.
All 35 victims, who included 12 women and two minors, were linked to
the Zetas cartel, and the killers were believed to be from the New
Generation gang, said an official of the Mexican armed forces who
couldn't be quoted by name for security reasons.
Local media reported that other banners appeared in Veracruz state
over the weekend, accusing the Mexican Navy, which has been active in
the anti-cartel offensive, of favoring the Sinaloa cartel, and of
kidnapping local people.
While the Interior Department statement did mention those banners, it
stressed that "any group or organization that operates outside the
law and with violence, is being combated through (government)
institutions, and without any favoritism."
However, security expert Edgardo Basucaglia has expressed fears that
Mexico might be spiraling into a situation where paramilitary style
organizations spring up, taking one side or another in the war
between cartels, with the aid, cooperation or tacit tolerance of
parts of the police or military forces.
Such a situation occurred in Colombia in the 1980s and 1990s, when
officials allowed illegal far-right militias to spring up to fight
leftist rebels. Those Colombian militias become deeply involved in
killings and drug trafficking.
"In every country that has been studied throughout history, when they
have faced this kind of institutional decadence, society has adopted
private mechanisms of protection that give rise to paramilitary
forces," Basucaglia wrote in a recent article. "Mexico today finds
itself in the initial stage of the situation they went through."
The Interior Department, which is responsible for domestic security,
rejected any vigilante or paramilitary action.
"In Mexico, there is no room for any person, group or organization to
violate by word or deed the rule of law, for whatever reason or end,"
the statement said. "The federal government rejects any action that
would stray from the path of legality."

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