Pubdate: Sat, 22 Jul 2017
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Copyright: 2017 Los Angeles Times
Contact:  http://www.latimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/248
Author: Kate Linthicum

MEXICO'S BLOODY DRUG WAR IS KILLING MORE PEOPLE THAN EVER

Drug war bloodshed in Mexico has spiked to record levels, with more
homicides recorded in June than in any month in at least two decades.

Prosecutors opened 2,234 homicide investigations last month, according
to government statistics released Friday. That's an increase of 40%
over June of last year and 80% over June of 2014.

Rising demand for heroin in the United States and a bloody power
struggle inside one of Mexico's most powerful drug cartels have put
the country on track to record more killings in 2017 than in any year
since the government began releasing crime data in 1997.

The 12,155 homicide cases opened from January to June make 2017 the
deadliest first half of a year.

Though violence used to be concentrated in a handful of states, it is
now rising nationwide, with 27 of Mexico's 32 states recording an
uptick in homicides compared with last year.

That includes states that are home to formerly tranquil tourist
destinations including Cancun and Cabo San Lucas, which have each been
the site of deadly shootouts.

Guerrero, home to the Pacific resort city of Acapulco, had the highest
number of homicides this year, with 1,161 cases opened since January.

The explosion of violence appears linked to the arrest and extradition
of former drug boss Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, who is preparing to
face trial in the U.S. next year on drug and murder charges.

Guzman's sons have been fighting another clique for control of the
powerful Sinaloa cartel since his arrest last year. The cartel's
instability has allowed other criminal groups, including the Jalisco
New Generation cartel, to move in, driving violence in Mexico's northwest.

This month, 26 people were killed in a pre-dawn firefight between a
faction of the Sinaloa cartel and members of another rival gang,
according to authorities in Sinaloa state.

While many government critics say it's time for Mexican President
Enrique Pena Nieto to revisit his drug war tactics, which include
targeting top cartel leaders and having soldiers act as police in many
communities, his government appears more interested in deflecting
blame to Mexico's neighbor to the north.

In recent months, top government officials have implored their
American counterparts to work on reducing domestic demand for drugs if
they want to make Mexico safer.

"Drug trafficking is a shared problem that will end only by addressing
its root causes," Mexico's foreign ministry said in a statement last
month after President Trump tweeted about Mexico's rising levels of
violence.

In recent years, Mexico has surpassed Colombia to become the largest
supplier of heroin to the U.S. Security analysts say the opioid
epidemic in the U.S. has left cartels flush with cash, which has
allowed them to step up the warfare.

What else is driving the bloodshed is a matter of opinion.

Some law enforcement officials have blamed the country's ongoing
transition to a new criminal justice system, which seeks to give more
rights to accused criminals. Under the new system, people caught with
illegal weapons are no longer automatically sent to jail before their
trials. That means some criminals are being released, they say.

Mexican security analyst Alejandro Hope says he believes another
structural problem is more likely to blame for the increase in
killings: Impunity.

Only one in five homicide cases leads to arrests, and few result in
successful prosecutions. That means that in Mexico, it's simple to
kill somebody and get away with it, he said.

"It's easy," he said. "And it's cheap."
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MAP posted-by: Matt