Pubdate: Tue, 13 Feb 2007
Source: Dallas Morning News (TX)
Copyright: 2007 The Dallas Morning News
Contact:  http://www.dallasnews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/117
Author: Alfredo Corchado

DRUG TURF WAR ADVANCES INTO 'SAFEST CITY IN MEXICO'

Slayings Of Police Shake Affluent Monterrey And Its Tony Suburbs

SAN PEDRO GARZA GARCIA, Mexico - From the shopping malls and the 
fashionable clothes of its residents, this could be any affluent U.S. 
suburb - University Park or Highland Park come to mind. Residents 
pride themselves on their American-style prosperity.

But in recent weeks, drug-related violence has shattered the 
tranquillity, and the main targets are police.

Seven police officers have been gunned down in Monterrey and its 
suburbs this year. Men with assault weapons killed two former 
officers last weekend.

Last year, 10 law enforcement officials were killed in the area, 
including five police chiefs. Among them was San Pedro's chief, 
Hector Ayala Moreno. A top state investigator, Marcelo Garza y Garza, 
was shot and killed as he walked out of church in San Pedro.

"One day you wake up and realize that your neighbors are not who you 
thought they were," said Denise Colyer, 22, a waitress at a Chili's 
here. "We thought we were immune from the violence, but we're 
surrounded by fear and drug traffickers."

Law enforcement officials on both sides of the border say the 
killings represent an attempt on the part of the Gulf drug cartel and 
its enforcement arm, the Zetas, to gain control of police through 
intimidation and corruption.

Nuevo Leon Gov. Jose Natividad Gonzalez Paras, whose state is hosting 
a worldwide Cultural Forum in September, insisted in an interview 
that Monterrey and its suburbs remain safe.

"Monterrey is still - and we're working to keeping it - the safest 
city in Mexico," Mr. Gonzalez said. "For us and for Mexico, organized 
crime is the number one problem we face."

About two hours by car from the Texas border, San Pedro Garza Garcia, 
population 120,000, is one of Latin America's wealthiest suburbs - 
and one with strong economic and cultural ties to Texas. It is home 
to about 1,500 Dallas Cowboys season-ticket holders, and it is a 
sister city to Plano.

But the same opulence that attracts Mexico's elite families is also a 
magnet for the nation's warring drug lords, authorities say. Two U.S. 
officials said at least five small cells working for the Gulf cartel 
now exert substantial control in Monterrey and its affluent suburbs. 
The assassins number about 15 per cell, said a U.S. law enforcement 
official, speaking on condition of anonymity.

They are some of the same hired guns that for years have terrorized 
Nuevo Laredo and other border communities, the officials said. The 
mastermind is the Gulf cartel's suspected regional leader, or 
gatekeeper, Miguel Trevino Morales, the U.S. officials said. Last 
month, Laredo issued an arrest warrant for Mr. Trevino in connection 
with a 2006 double homicide in Texas.

Battle Over Texas Routes

The Gulf and Sinaloa cartels have been battling over control of 
routes into Texas, particularly Interstate 35, authorities say.

The killings in the Monterrey area are eerily similar to those in 
Nuevo Laredo, which for three years has been the center of a turf war 
that has left hundreds dead, including law enforcement officials and 
several U.S. citizens. In addition, about 140 Nuevo Laredo police 
officers have been fired for corruption.

In the face of police killings, law enforcement officials in the 
Monterrey area are resigning in waves, including more than 40 in 
recent days. Last week, Monterrey Mayor Adalberto Madero fired 52 
police officers suspected of corruption and collusion with drug traffickers.

Some of the slain policemen were gunned down in San Pedro Garza 
Garcia, which had had the reputation of the best and most honest and 
professional police force nationwide. But two dozen police officers 
have resigned this year out of fear for their lives, Mexican and U.S. 
officials said.

Carlos Castresana, a U.N. representative and expert on drug 
traffickers, compared the killing of law enforcement officials in the 
Monterrey area to the situation in Medellin, Colombia, where a wave 
of police killings in the 1980s sent shock waves through the city and 
intimidated the police force.

Law enforcement and government officials in Nuevo Leon play down the 
Medellin comparison and deny that the Gulf cartel controls the city.

"We are working with the federal government [to develop] a new model, 
a more efficient model, to fight and win the war, which is as 
important to our country as it is to the state," said Mr. Gonzalez, 
the governor.

He applauded President Felipe Calderon for sending federal troops to 
Nuevo Leon, including some manning checkpoints in San Pedro Garza Garcia.

Since taking office Dec. 1, Mr. Calderon has taken strong measures 
against the traffickers, ordering 25,000 troops and federal police to 
the Mexican states where most of last year's 2,200 gangland-style 
killings occurred.

But a senior U.S. official said corruption among police agencies is 
widespread. The official blamed low pay as a reason many police 
officers end up working for cartels.

"If that isn't a crisis, I don't know what qualifies as a crisis," 
the official said. "The cops serve as paid security forces to provide 
protection for drug traffickers."

Over the weekend, Monterrey Catholic Archbishop Francisco Robles 
Ortega called on authorities to provide better pay for police.

Mr. Gonzalez acknowledged that police corruption is the root of the 
problem, along with the American desire for illegal drugs. He said 
efforts were under way to make the police forces more professional and clean.

Raises Business Costs

"This is a binational problem, one that requires a binational 
solution," Mr. Gonzalez said. "Pointing fingers will not help anyone."

Some business executives say privately that the violence has raised 
their costs because of added security. And that hurts Mexico's 
competitiveness when China has unseated Mexico as the United States' 
No. 2 trading partner.

"Visitors are urged to remain vigilant" while in Monterrey, said a 
report by the Overseas Security Advisory Council, an advisory body to 
the U.S. State Department. The region is home to more than 50,000 
Americans, plus about 1,200 U.S. companies, many of them based in Texas.

"The escalation of violence in the Monterrey area is forcing 
companies to ask: 'How much more does it cost to protect my personnel 
and facilities?' " said Fred Burton, vice president for Austin-based 
Stratfor, a private intelligence gathering group. "Security costs are 
rising so that facilities and personnel are protected adequately."

Monterrey is a powerful economic engine, accounting for more than 4 
percent of Mexico's gross domestic product.

Its relative prosperity has given Monterrey and especially its suburb 
of San Pedro Garza Garcia a U.S. lifestyle like few Mexican cities. 
On weekends, residents flock to Texas malls, and some head to 
vacation homes on South Padre Island.

But residents say their sense of security is fraying.

"This was supposed to be the most honest police force, the safest 
place, and that just isn't so," said Gabriela Barragan, a 35-year-old 
mother of two sipping Starbucks coffee at an upscale shopping center. 
"Our tranquillity has been shattered."
- ---
MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman