Thursday, August 19, 2010

Body of kidnapped mayor dumped in northern Mexico



Security forces found the body of a slain mayor yesterday near Mexico’s richest city, days after he was abducted by hitmen in the latest attack on a public official by increasingly bold drug cartels.

President Felipe Calderon, who has staked his presidency on a faltering drug war, condemned the “cowardly assassination” of Edelmiro Cavazos, the mayor of a town on the outskirts of Monterrey, an industrial centre with close US business ties.


A Mexican soldier displays an AK-47 rifle seized from suspected drug traffickers at the headquarters of the Ministry of Defence in Mexico City yesterday, August 18, 2010.





“The murder of Edelmiro is an outrage and forces us to redouble our efforts to fight these cowardly criminals,” Calderon wrote in a Twitter update.

Cavazos, a 38-year-old, US-educated mayor from Calderon’s conservative National Action Party, was found dumped on a rural road outside his town of Santiago. He was blindfolded and his hands were tied.

Heavily armed soldiers patrolled the area and helicopters flew overhead as dozens of residents of the colonial tourist town lit candles, wept and held hands in Santiago’s cobblestone square.

Alejandro Garza, the attorney-general in the border state of Nuevo Leon, which includes Santiago and Monterrey, 230km from Texas, said Cavazos was shot three times and accused drug cartels of being responsible for the killing.

Nuevo Leon Governor Rodrigo Medina urged Calderon to send more troops to Monterrey and surrounding areas, echoing a plea from Mexican business groups published in newspapers across the country.

Medina said this week that Cavazos, who took office last year, was probably targeted for his efforts to clean up Santiago’s corrupt police force, part of a nationwide effort to curb endemic police graft.

The mayor of the wealthy San Pedro Garza Garcia municipality, part of Monterrey, said drug gangs had threatened Cavazos directly late last year.

“When the mayor took office, he told me that criminal groups had gone to see him, saying: either you join us or we eliminate you,” Mayor Mauricio Fernandez told local radio.

Santiago, a popular weekend getaway for Monterrey residents, has also become a staging post for drug gangs smuggling narcotics north into the United States. Many capos have taken refuge in mansions nestled in surrounding hills.

More than 28,000 people, mainly drug traffickers and police, have been killed in Mexico’s drug war since December 2006, intensifying worries in Washington about the stability of the United States’ oil-producing neighbour.

Interior Minister Francisco Blake arrived in Monterrey and held talks with officials. Cavazos is due to be buried today.

The death of Cavazos, a father of three who was taken from his home by hitmen dressed as police on Sunday night, is the first attack on an official by cartels in Nuevo Leon, a manufacturing centre and once a model for developing nations.

Drug violence has surged in Monterrey, where per capita income is double Mexico’s average, since a dispute between the powerful Gulf cartel and its former armed wing the Zetas turned into all-out war since the start of this year.

That turf war is also terrorising neighbouring Tamaulipas state, where hitmen killed a candidate for governor in June, the highest level political murder in Mexico in 16 years.

Violence in Nuevo Leon is still well below the dramatic levels of border cities like Ciudad Juarez, but the more than 350 drug killings in Monterrey this year are a challenge for Calderon as foreign companies begin to question the safety of doing business in Latin America’s second-largest economy.

“Insecurity in Monterrey is now spinning out of control and is a clear threat to investment. The city is losing its leadership,” said political analyst Jose Luis Garcia at the University of Monterrey. “Politicians ... aren’t prepared to pay the price and confront the problems.”

Local business leader Juan Ernesto Sandoval warned this week that a nascent economic recovery in Nuevo Leon, after Mexico’s punishing downturn last year, was under threat.

“There are investment projects that are being frozen,” he said, pointing to one retail chain that put construction of stores and creation of 1,000 new jobs in Monterrey on hold.







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