Fed up with corruption, thousands of armed vigilantes take over
Mexican town and arrest the police
Saturday, April 06, 2013 by: J. D. Heyes
(NaturalNews) The country of Mexico has been a de facto narco-state
for years, as competing drug cartels bought off the police, judges,
local officials and journalists they could, killed those they could not,
and battled each other for turf. Throughout it all, the collateral
damage has been heavy; in the past decade alone, tens of thousands have
died, including scores of civilians, though the exact number is unknown
because authorities say they are sure all of the victims have yet to be
discovered.
Such carnage has frozen many Mexican towns in fear, but some - finally -
are beginning to fight back. One of them, Tierra Colorado - a city of
about 20,000 located in the state of Guerrero, in southwester Mexico -
has formed its own "vigilante" group, to battle the cartels as well
as the police they have corrupted.
The self-described "community police" force of about 1,500 took over
recently and arrested police officers there after their "commander" was
killed and his body dumped in the street, various reports said.
The vigilantes arrested 12 officers and the town's one-time director of
public security, each of whom they accused of having a role in the
killing of Guadalupe Quinones Carbajal, 28, at the behest of a local
drug cartel.
'We have besieged the municipality'
In addition, the group has set up improvised checkpoints on the major
highway running through the town, a road that connects the capital of
Mexico City with the popular resort city of Acapulco, which is fewer
than 40 miles away.
In fact, Britain's Daily Mail reported, a tourist heading to the
nearby beaches with relatives for the Easter weekend was injured March
26 when some of the
vigilantes fired on his vehicle after he refused to stop at a
roadblock.
The Tierra Colorado vigilante group has taken over security duties as a
movement by other "self defense" groups in the region in a bid to fight
back against the powerful drug cartels. Some 2,000 civilians are thought
to have fled the town
since the takeover, likely fearing additional violence from the
inevitable clashes between vigilantes and those loyal to the cartels.
Though local cops and officials have been detained by the group,
vigilantes are not meting out their own justice; the officers and former
security official they seized have been turned over to state
prosecutors, who promised to investigate their alleged ties to organized
crime.
Nearly all of the vigilantes are armed with some sort of firearm,
according to photos taken by the Daily Mail. Some are pictured
with high-powered military rifles.
"We have besieged the municipality, because here criminals operate with
impunity in broad daylight, in view of municipal authorities," said the
vigilantes' spokesman, Bruno Placido Valerio.
"We have detained the director of public security because he is involved
with criminals and he knows who killed our commander," he added.
Vigilante movement is spreading in
Mexico
The Tierra Colorado vigilante group is part of a loose regional
organization known as the Union of Peoples and Organizations of Guerrero
State, which is comprised of residents from that embattled enclave as
well as neighboring communities like Ayutla de los Libres, Teconoapa and
San Marcos.
As the vigilante movement has grown, so, too, have checkpoints
throughout southern and western Mexico, featuring armed, masked men who
search passing vehicles for weapons and contraband.
The groups say they are combating violence, kidnap and extortion wrought
by the feared drug cartels; human rights groups, however, are concerned
that the vigilantes may be actually cooperating with some of the
criminal gangs.
Still, there can be no question of the need for some form of order. The
state of Guerrero is home to some of Mexico's poorest rural communities;
last year it had the country's highest murder rate, with 90 percent of
crimes going unsolved or not investigated.
No matter what you think of vigilantism, is it one of the inevitable
results of a breakdown in the social contract between government and the
people.
Sources:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk
http://www.isciencetimes.com
http://www.foxnews.com
Natural News Network © 2013 All Rights Reserved.
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