Pubdate: Sun, 23 Jun 2002
Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA)
Copyright: 2002 San Jose Mercury News
Contact:  http://www.bayarea.com/mld/mercurynews
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/390
Author: Kevin G. Hall

LOWER COST, U.S. PATROLS CAUSE RISE IN MEXICAN COCAINE USE

Families Struggle With New Crisis

MEXICO CITY - After years of dismissing cocaine as a U.S. problem, Mexicans 
are finding that it's their problem, too.

Government drug-treatment clinics that saw 3,000 abusers a year in the 
1990s now see 50,000. Abuse used to be largely confined to the northern 
Mexican states from which U.S. cocaine smuggling operations were launched. 
Now it has seeped south to big cities such as Mexico City and Guadalajara.

There, powdered cocaine, with its high price limiting its use to Mexico's 
upper classes, has given way to $2-a-rock crack so cheap that it's luring 
street kids away from sniffing solvents.

The problem has deep roots, but the security crackdown on the U.S.-Mexican 
border since Sept. 11 intensified it, Mexican drug officials say. They say 
smugglers are finding it harder to move cocaine into the United States and 
instead are selling it in Mexico -- at rock-bottom prices. As evidence, 
they cite the high purity of cocaine recently seized, suggesting that 
smugglers are selling the drug before squeezing out the extra profit 
derived from cutting it.

U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration chief Asa Hutchinson corroborates the 
theory that tighter border enforcement is responsible. Cocaine purity fell 
9 percent last year in the United States, reflecting tight supply, 
Hutchinson told the Mercury News. U.S. coke dealers are "diluting it to 
make it go further," he said.

In Mexico City's outskirts, at a group-therapy session for parents of drug 
addicts, Pedro Bernal Garca rues the consequences. The working-class father 
explains that he thought Mexico was only a transit country for Colombian 
cocaine bound for the United States.

"We are just so sad because we don't want to accept that our kids have 
fallen into drugs," said Bernal, whose two sons, aged 27 and 24, are 
imprisoned for stealing to feed their cocaine habits.

As other parents nod in unison, he adds something many U.S. families 
already know: "This is a global problem."

Mexico now has at least 2.5 million drug users and at least half a million 
of them are hard-core drug addicts, said Guido Belsasso, Mexico's 
anti-addictions czar, in a recent interview at the National Addictions 
Advisory Board. Mexico's population is about 100 million.

Historically, traffickers brought Colombian cocaine to the United States 
via the Florida and gulf coasts. More effective interdiction in those areas 
during the 1990s compelled Colombian traffickers to make Mexico the 
principal transit route for U.S.-bound cocaine.

Along the way, Colombians began paying with cocaine instead of money. What 
Mexican cartels couldn't get across the border they began selling in Mexico.

Police complicity in the drug trade is part of the problem. On Reforma, 
Mexico City's main boulevard, the driver of a police tractor-trailer rig 
carrying horses passes a Mercury News reporter. The driver, wearing a 
police uniform, holds a lit marijuana cigarette the size of a cigar. 
Mexican newspapers report almost daily about police on the payroll of drug 
traffickers.

"I think if kids know where to find the drugs, then certainly the 
authorities must know this," said Villegas of Casa Alianza. "It is a bit 
like the authorities are closing their eyes."

Near one downtown food market, a group of addicted children and teenagers 
smoke rocks of cocaine just doors away from the local police precinct 
headquarters.

Cocaine "used to be just for adults, but now kids can get it easily," said 
Marta Rodrguez Lopez, 41, a street addict who acts as den mother to the 
group of ragged, drug-addicted street kids. "They sell it to them like it 
was chocolate."
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