This
is my third attempt to get this article up which contradicts the
narrative that Trump's wall may be a solution to a “non-existant
problem”
Trump's
“solution” may be problematical to say the least but the problem
sure ain't “non-existant” and the powers-that-be don't want you
to know that especially if it comes from a Spanish language source.
I
got this posted successfully a couple of days ago after many
shennnagins but it has disappeared.
I
tell the story in the following video
By tunnel or by mule: how drugs are moved from Mexico into Arizona
The
Sinaloa Cartel controls 90% of the narcotics shipped through this
stretch of the US border
El Pais,
4 November, 2016
Sandra lives less than 10 minutes from Arizona but she cannot cross over to the US side because she does not have a visa. Her modest house with its unpainted walls sits atop a hill at the end of bumpy dirt road in Nogales, Sonora, a state in northern Mexico that is home to 234,000 people. The border wall that separates this Nogales from Nogales, Arizona – a town of some 20,000 people and a few stores where Mexicans with visas like to shop – runs next to her house. From the door of her home, Sandra can see the high fence, made of three-meter-high rusting metal pales, that divides the two countries and snakes across the hills toward the horizon.
4 November, 2016
Sandra lives less than 10 minutes from Arizona but she cannot cross over to the US side because she does not have a visa. Her modest house with its unpainted walls sits atop a hill at the end of bumpy dirt road in Nogales, Sonora, a state in northern Mexico that is home to 234,000 people. The border wall that separates this Nogales from Nogales, Arizona – a town of some 20,000 people and a few stores where Mexicans with visas like to shop – runs next to her house. From the door of her home, Sandra can see the high fence, made of three-meter-high rusting metal pales, that divides the two countries and snakes across the hills toward the horizon.
“They
found a drug tunnel in the pink house down there. Helicopters arrived
that day and closed down the streets,” says the 38-year-old who
lives in Buenos Aires, a shanty town outside Nogales whose strategic
location means US officials regularly search there for tunnels. The
gangs that control the underground routes patrol the area and there
are informants with binoculars and radios on every avenue, street
corner and alley, watching and reporting the movements of agents near
the entrances to the tunnels, where drugs and people are trafficked
into the United States.
The
cartels are continually finding new ways to smuggle drugs
“Sometimes,
when I’ve been outside washing clothes, I hear how they shout at
them in their language to get down from the wall. When I see someone
trying to climb over with a bag [of drugs] I go inside my house to
avoid problems,” she says.
Sandra
has lived in this slum for 15 years. Before the United States built
its wall of rusted metal bars, she says, there was a shorter fence
that locals would cut with pliers and slip through to go shopping “on
the other side.” Then the fence was replaced with metal sheeting,
until in 2007 the current barrier was put up.
“In
the 1990s, I used to cross through the hole, as we used to say. There
wasn’t all this technology,” Sandra says, pointing at security
cameras on the other side.
A
few meters down the road, a kindergarten decorated in bright colors
stands in sharp contrast to the wall. Vanessa Quijada, the director
of the school, says it is normal for young kids to see police
activity and men scuttling over the wall. “They know the wall
divides us, that it separates one country from the other,” she
says. The street where the school is located runs all the way through
downtown Nogales where men with backpacks filled with drugs climb up
the rectangular bars in front of the stores just a few steps away
from the checkpoint. “It’s a very common thing,” one shopkeeper
explains. “They climb up like Spider-Man and quickly jump over to
the other side.”
According
to municipal authorities, 40% of the population in Nogales, Sonora,
is transient. Hundreds of people who have been deported from the
United States stay in the town, sometimes indefinitely, most of them
picking up jobs in manufacturing, waiting for another opportunity to
enter the United States. Nogales was one of the first cities in
northern Mexico to attract maquiladoras, or US assembly plants.
Father Ricardo Reciado, who is involved in outreach work in troubled
communities, says hundreds of young men and women have joined the
drug trade as recruits. “They use primary and secondary school
students to move drugs, as well as little boys from the slums to
serve as informants,” he adds.
A
dangerous border
The
Arizona-Sonora border is one of the biggest entry points for drugs
into the United States, and the Tucson border patrol is one of the
busiest units, with eight stations covering most of Arizona, from New
Mexico to Yuma County. Its agents typically seize around half of the
marijuana that enters the country along the 350-kilometer border,
says Vicente Paco, the spokesman for the Tucson border patrol.
The
gangs operating here not only oversee the drugs trade, but also
control the gun and migration routes, Paco says. “Any person who
wants to enter the United States illegally has to join organized
crime. They have to pay the organizations and if they don’t have
money they are used as mules.”
One
of the most dangerous areas along the Arizona-Sonora border is the
Great Desert of Altar, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, where
temperatures can reach 50ºC. Its inhospitableness makes it
attractive to the drug traffickers, says the border patrol. A common
way to transport drugs is to send the mules in groups of up to 15 to
make the 15-day journey through the desert with 20 to 25 kilograms of
marijuana strapped to their backs.
The
gangs that control the tunnels use look-outs to spot border patrols
The
organized crime network is so large it uses people on both sides of
the border. Since 2014, more than 80 individuals have been arrested
in the hills for spying on law-enforcement agents working at the
border. “Before, a lookout who watched our police efforts would
enter the country as an illegal immigrant and the only thing we could
do was return him to his country,” one agent says. Now, if border
patrol finds a campsite on a hill with paramilitary equipment and
radios operating on secret frequencies, the state of Arizona will
charge the suspect. “They are the eyes of the criminal
organizations,” he adds.
A
recent US border patrol report said agents seized 1.5 million pounds
of marijuana and 4,294 pounds of cocaine in 2015, with Tucson alone
accounting for 48.6% of all seizures. Agent Paco says he has seen a
rise in the confiscation of methamphetamine, heroin and cocaine.
The
cartels are continually diversifying the ways they transport drugs.
Authorities have discovered 107 cross-border tunnels in Nogales
alone, while each day dozens of men carrying drug shipments climb
over the wall. “Nogales is also known as the tunnel capital. Since
Sonora is a mining state there is the kind of technology [needed] to
build this type of infrastructure,” Paco says. The border patrol
has also found catapults, staircases and loading ramps near the
border.
Meanwhile,
the Sinaloa Cartel has reinforced its presence in Arizona in order to
ramp up its shipments of marijuana and heroin, the Drug Enforcement
Administration (DEA) says. The organization once led by imprisoned
drug boss Joaquín El Chapo Guzmán, who is now fighting extradition
to the United States, poses the greatest threat to Arizona’s
communities, controlling an estimated 90% of drugs that cross the
border. The Sinaloa cartel also controls arms and money-laundering
routes.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.