Record drug-related deaths tallied in Mexico in 2009
By Arthur Brice
CNN
(CNN) -- Mexico ended 2009 with a record number of
drug-related deaths, greatly surpassing the then-record
tally reached in 2008, unofficial counts indicate.
The government has not released official figures,
but national media say 7,600 Mexicans lost their lives in
the war on drugs in 2009. Mexican President Felipe Calderon
said earlier this year that 6,500 Mexicans died in drug
violence in 2008.
Officials say more than 15,000 Mexicans have died
since Calderon declared war on the drug cartels shortly
after taking office in December 2006. Some observers, such
as former U.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich, have likened the
situation to a civil war.
The vast majority of the deaths have been among
criminals, not civilians, Calderon and other Mexican
officials have said repeatedly.
Ciudad Juarez, across the border from El Paso,
Texas, leads all other Mexican cities in the number of
deaths, news report say. There were more than 2,575 slayings
in the city in 2009, according to a tally by TV station
XHIJ. Juarez Mayor Jose Reyes Ferriz told CNN he could not
confirm that number but that it sounded correct.
There were 1,600 homicides in the city in 2008.
"This has been a very difficult year. Very
complicated," Reyes said Thursday in a telephone interview.
Chihuahua state, in which Ciudad Juarez is located,
accounted for 30 percent of the nation's drug-related
killings, according to news reports.
Juarez is the central battleground for two
organized crime gangs -- the Juarez and Pacific cartels.
Those cartels are fighting for the lucrative market across
the border in the United States.
Gangs affiliated with the cartels have heightened
the violence as they fight for turf in street-level sales in
Ciudad Juarez, Reyes said.
The Aztecas gang, he said, is allied with the
Juarez Cartel and has 7,000 members. More than 1,200 Azteca
members are in jail, Reyes said.
Two gangs are affiliated with the Pacific Cartel --
the Mexicles and the Artistas Asesinos (Assassin Artists).
The Mexicles has about 1,200 members and the Artistas
Asesinos, commonly know as the AA, has around 600 members,
Reyes said.
"There is a very strong fight between those two
groups," Reyes said.
Despite the dire situation, Reyes sees a brighter
2010.
The appointment of a new federal attorney general
in September has led to more personnel being appointed to
Ciudad Juarez, Reyes said, That, in turn, has led to more
prosecutions, the mayor said.
Reyes also said a new state law in Chihuahua makes
it harder for crime suspects to plea bargain or receive
lenient sentences.
But he points to a non-governmental program as a
major step toward fighting the bad guys: Ciudad Juarez
starts working Friday with with Crime Stoppers
International, a community-based private organization that
receives anonymous tips from residents and passes them along
to law enforcement authorities.
The organization has 1,200 programs worldwide,
Crime Stoppers President Gary Murphy said.
Mexico is the first country in Latin America to
work with Crime Stoppers, and Ciudad Juarez is the only city
in the world to contract directly with the group, Murphy and
Reyes said. Everywhere else, the anti-crime group works with
community organizations.
The city contacted Canada-based Crime Stoppers this
summer, Murphy said.
It was a necessary step, Reyes said, because Juarez
residents "lost confidence in the police a long time ago."
Tipsters will call an 800 number that does not have caller
ID or any other way to identify the caller, Murphy and Reyes
said. The calls will not be answered in Mexico or the United
States, but in an undisclosed nation.
Reyes calls it "a sophisticated system that is
digital, anonymous and coded."
The mayor said he believes Juarez residents will
embrace the program because they are familiar with Crime
Stoppers, which has been used in Albuquerque, New Mexico,
for more than 30 years and also in El Paso, right across the
border.
"Crime Stoppers is well-known in Juarez," he said.
"It will be easy to convince them."
Crime Stoppers guarantees anonymity, Murphy said.
"This way they can pass along the information and
not have to worry about the repercussions," he said. "It's
the major reason people call Crime Stoppers no matter where
they are in the world."
CNN's Mario Gonzalez and Dave Alsup contributed to
this report.