THE MEXICAN OK CORRAL
Ricardo Valenzuela
HERMOSILLO,
Mexico
" This past Wednesday, I was at the Economist Business Forum in my home town of
Hermosillo when
my personal friend, Governor Eduardo Bours, arrived to give the welcome message
to more than 500 participants. But then one of his aids showed up with a little
paper note and this was what he got: Police had chased the remnants of a
criminal assault force through mountains near the Arizona border on Thursday
after kidnappings and gun battles that left at least 22 people dead and the
police forces chasing the rest of the pack all over the high sierra.
Federal police helicopters and ground forces searched the Sierra Madre for
fleeing gunmen on Thursday while state police moved in to replace terrified local
officers who abandoned the town of
Cananea, 20
miles south of the
U.S.
border. At that moment this sierra close to Arizpe, become more dangers than
100 years ago when Apache bands use to penetrate the State of Sonora from the
San Carlos reservation located in Arizona, assaulting ranches and killing
innocent people. Is a matter of fact that the Apache leader, Geronimo, got his
name in that area when a cowboy signal the resemblance of the Apache chief with
another cowboy named Geronimo.
Officials said Thursday that Mexican army troops had joined the fight Wednesday
after a powerful drug cartel sent the assailants into town. However, this was
an operation which was coordinated by the state police fallowing direct orders
from Governor Bours to go after those criminal using all the force of the
State.
Armed with assault rifles and riding in 10 to 15 vehicles, this group of
professional killers, like a military operation pulled four lightly armed city
police officers out of police cars and executed them in a roadside park and
kept going terrorizing the town in a way that made remember the movie Tombstone,
where those criminals known as “the cowboys” were in charge not the town
authorities.
The invasion of Cananea " a town that helped spark the 1910 Mexican Revolution
when U.S. forces crossed the border to help put down a miners' strike " showed
the brashness and power of Mexico's ruthless organized crime gangs. Cananea is
also the town where the Generals from Sonora"Obregon, Calles, de la Huerta,
Serrano" in 1920 did write the Agua Prieta Plan which then was proclaimed in
that city border with Douglas to march against President Carranza and take over
the control of the country in what was known the Sonoran Hegemony.
The first outside authorities to arrive in Cananea on Wednesday found an eerie
no man's land where local law enforcement had melted away when this small
private army invaded the town. One witness affirmed: “this is understanding
because our little police department is not ready nor training to fight what
seems to be a professional army of mercenaries.”
"When the state police arrived, there was not a single municipal police
officer," Sonora Gov. Eduardo Bours said, noting he previously asked for a
federal investigation of the Cananea police force, apparently to determine
whether it was infiltrated by
Mexico's
Pacific
Coast drug gangs. Some people informed
authorities this commando was on its way to
Chihuahua and decided to stop in Cananea to
settle some accounts with members of the municipal police on their payroll.
"We had to take over the command. There wasn't anyone there. They had all
left." And boy they did to start a fierce counteroffensive using packs of
local policemen who know the area, know how to track animals as well as humans,
and more importantly, they are descendents of those brave sonorans who, a
little bit more than a century ago, use to fight Apaches and Comanches
renegades indians.
Five kidnapped city police were found dead and two residents were killed. State
and federal police and soldiers rescued four civilians, including two children,
as the battle broke out.
Federal Public Safety Secretary Genaro Garcia Luna blamed a turf battle between
the Gulf and Pacific drug gangs.
"The whole adventure started when an armed command first abducted a police
patrol then went out on the streets of Cananea ... abducting policemen,"
Garcia Luna told reporters. "It is a group linked to the Gulf cartel,
waging a turf battle with the Pacific people, for control of this
territory."
He praised Sonora state officials for their "efficient" response and
their skills to fight in that danger area of the Sierra Madre in which not even
the army can show that kind of efficient tactics that produced the big defeat
for those criminals.
The gunmen tried to hole up in mountainous terrain around the town of
Arizpe, about 50 miles to
the south. But police and soldiers followed the assailants until they found
them in a little valley ready to confront whoever. The shootout started
resulting in the killing of 16 members of the fierce commando in an hours-long
shootout, Bours said.
While President Felipe Calderon has dispatched thousands of army troops to
fight the cartels, critics say troops trained for battle should not be acting
as police officers.
The official National Human Rights Commission said Tuesday there was credible
evidence that some of the newly deployed troops committed rapes, illegal
searches and other abuses. But I have to insist and repeat, this was an
operation executed by the State police fallowing orders from Gov. Eduardo Bours
who really understand that the main responsibility of the State is the
protection of its citizens.
"Soldiers are not trained to carry out police work," said Jose Luis
Soberanes, president of the rights commission. "If you make them do it,
they go overboard and we see these type of cases."
But the people from
Sonora reacted showing their anger and sending a clear message to Soberanes:
"We are feed up with your attitude protecting criminals," and
praising Bours for his determination to protect them comparing him with another
famous sonoran, Alvaro Obregon, who was one of the main leaders of the Mexican
Revolution, president of Mexico in 1924, and always carried the reputation for
his boldness and decisiveness.
At this moment the
persecution of the rest of the gang is in progress all over the Arizpe sierra
and the next shootout is about to happen at any moment. But seems that Gov.
Bours is firm about his decision to put an end to this kind of barbaric actions
in our State, when he is trying to build a friendly place for investments.
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