Pubdate: Sat, 25 Sep 2010
Source: Macon Telegraph (GA)
Copyright: 2010 The Macon Telegraph Publishing Company
Contact:  http://www.macontelegraph.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/667
Author: Tim Johnson, McClatchy newspapers

MEXICO DRUG WAR TOLL: 10TH MAYOR SLAIN, ANOTHER WOUNDED

MEXICO CITY -- As if Mexicans needed more evidence that criminal 
groups are trying to hijack the political life of the nation, it came 
with a ferocious triple-whammy punch in the past 24 hours.

Assailants shot and seriously wounded the mayor-elect of a town in 
the border state of Chihuahua Friday afternoon, less than a day after 
commandos in Nuevo Leon state executed a sitting mayor, making him 
the 10th municipal chief slain so far this year.

In Mexico City, a fugitive legislator with drug charges pending 
against him sneaked into Congress and took his seat, automatically 
obtaining immunity from prosecution.

Attacks on mayors are quickening, a sign that drug cartels are 
seeking to intimidate politicians and neutralize them when they 
interfere with criminal activity.

Gunmen outside a veterinary clinic in Gran Morelos, a town in the 
high desert west of Chihuahua City, shot and seriously wounded 
Mayor-elect Ricardo Solis Manriquez, the websites of the Reforma and 
El Universal newspapers said.

Solis, elected in early July, is to take office on Oct. 9.

Earlier in the day, eulogies poured in for Prisciliano Rodriguez 
Salinas, a mayor who was slain outside his ranch house in a rural 
area of Nuevo Leon state.

Four mayors have been killed in the past five weeks alone. The new 
attacks roiled the political arena, a sign that politicians long 
complacent toward drug trafficking are feeling heat. Rodriguez, 53, 
was elected mayor of Doctor Gonzalez, 30 miles northeast of the 
industrial city of Monterrey, by a coalition headed by the 
Institutional Revolutionary Party, the once-dominant force that is 
now the largest opposition party.

President Felipe Calderon issued a statement Friday morning pledging 
that his government "will not ease up on criminal groups."

Nuevo Leon state Attorney General Alejandro Garza y Garza said 
members of an "armed command" had ambushed Rodriguez outside his 
rural home in Doctor Gonzalez, and shot him with a .223-caliber 
assault rifle and a 9 mm handgun.

Garza y Garza described the region, which is less than a two-hour 
drive from the Texas border -- as "a conflict zone" due to fierce 
rivalries between drug cartels.

Nuevo Leon Gov. Rodrigo Medina decried the "cowardly assassination."

"They will not frighten us," Medina said of drug cartels. "We will not yield."

The mayors of cities and towns in regions of Mexico that cartels 
dominate face pressure to turn a blind eye on criminal activity. 
Given a choice of "plomo" or "plata" -- a lead bullet or a cash 
payoff -- some mayors become virtual allies of the criminal groups.

Mayors also direct 2,022 municipal police departments, and Mexican 
Secretary of Public Security Genaro Garcia Luna said in early August 
that drug cartels were paying an estimated $100 million a month in 
bribes to corrupt municipal police officers.

The assassinations of mayors are becoming not only more frequent, but 
also more brazen. On Sept. 8, two gunmen marched into the El Naranjo 
Town Hall in San Luis Potosi state in broad daylight and murdered 
Mayor Alexander Lopez Garcia as he presided over a meeting, leaving 
his body slumped on the floor in a pool of blood.

After the Aug. 16 kidnapping of the mayor of Santiago, a picturesque 
town outside Monterrey, prosecutors said that members of Mayor 
Edelmiro Cavazos' own police force had carried out the act. His body 
turned up two days later.

The 10 mayors assassinated so far this year have governed towns in 
seven Mexican states: Chihuahua, Guerrero, Hidalgo, Nuevo Leon, 
Oaxaca, San Luis Potosi and Tamaulipas.

In late June, a commando squad gunned down the leading gubernatorial 
candidate in the border state of Tamaulipas, Rodolfo Torre Cantu. It 
was the highest-level political assassination since presidential 
candidate Luis Donaldo Colosio was shot dead in 1994.

On Thursday, television networks broke into programming to show 
legislator Julio Cesar Godoy taking his seat in the federal Chamber 
of Deputies.

Godoy later held a news conference to declare that his 2009 arrest 
warrant for allegedly offering protection to one of Mexico's most 
feared drug gangs, the Familia Michoacana, was an effort by 
Calderon's ruling National Action Party to persecute his party in 
Michoacan state. Godoy is a member of the opposition leftist 
Revolutionary Democratic Party.

"I am not a criminal," Godoy said.

He skirted a federal police cordon that was aiming to capture him 
outside Congress, thus avoiding arrest and taking his legislative 
seat, automatically winning immunity from prosecution.

MEXICAN MAYORS SLAIN IN 2010

1) Prisciliano Rodriguez Salinas Doctor Gonzalez, Nuevo Leon state Sept 23.

2) Alexander Lopez-Garcia    El Naranjo, San Luis Potosi state Sept 8.

3) Marco Antonio Leal Garcia Hidalgo, Tamaulipas state Aug. 29.

4) Edelmiro Cavazos  Santiago, Nuevo Leon state Kidnapped Aug. 16, 
found dead two days later.

5) Nicolas Garcia Ambrosio Santo Domingo de Morelos, Oaxaca state June 30.

6) Oscar Venancio Rivera San Jose del Progreso, Oaxaca June 20.

7) Jesus Manuel Lara Rodriguez   Guadalupe, Chihuahua state June 19.

8) Jose Santiago Agustin Zapotitlan Tablas, Guerrero state April 28

9) Manuel Estrada   El Mezquital, Hidalgo state  Feb. 22.

10) Ramon Mendivil Sotelo  Guadalupe y Calvo, Chihuahua state  Feb. 17.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom