Gulf News

‘El Chapo’ leaves a void in his Mexican hometown

GUZMAN, FOUND GUILTY OF TRAFFICKIN­G DRUGS TO US, NOW FACES LIFE IN JAIL

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The downfall of Joaquin ‘El Chapo’ Guzman has done little to diminish his drug cartel’s power, but locals say it has had a devastatin­g effect in one place: his remote and lawless hometown, Badiraguat­o.

‘El Chapo’ was born 61 years ago in this small, dusty town in Mexico’s Sierra Madre mountains, in the northweste­rn state that would give his multi-billion-dollar global drug empire its name: the Sinaloa cartel.

Guzman, who was found guilty onnTuesday of traffickin­g tons of drugs to the United States across a quarter of a century, now faces the likelihood of life in jail at his sentencing on June 25 in New York federal court.

But he remains a hero in Badiraguat­o and the surroundin­g county, where residents remember him as a largerthan-life figure who ruled his fiefdom with largesse and brought a now-lost prosperity the Mexican government never provided.

“Now that Mr Chapo’s gone, there’s more poverty. People have to leave here to look for work, because things are pretty tough,” says Jorge Valenzuela, a resident of Potrero de Bejarano, a small village at the far edge of the county.

The air is thick with tension in this region, where the police are nowhere to be seen and men with AK-47s and walkietalk­ies patrol the countrysid­e in armoured pickups.

Many wear caps stamped with the number 701 — a reference to the spot ‘El Chapo’ reached on Forbes magazine’s list of the world’s richest people, with an estimated fortune of $1 billion.

The mountains are dotted with marijuana and opium poppy fields. Silence is the rule: locals’ lips are generally sealed when it comes to talking about the area’s number one industry.

Poverty and drugs

But get them started, and they gush praise for Guzman.

“He gave people money to buy things, gave them seeds to plant [drugs]. Now there’s nobody to do that,” Valenzuela told AFP.

“Hardly anyone is planting crops, since Mr Chapo is the one they all sold to.”

Together with the states of Chihuahua and Durango, Sinaloa forms Mexico’s “Golden Triangle,” a region rife with marijuana and poppy fields, and home to many of the country’s most notorious drug trafficker­s.

‘El Chapo’ grew up in a tiny hamlet of about 100 people called La Tuna, high in the mountains.

He once told Sean Penn in an interview for Rolling Stone magazine — a meeting that infamously led to his downfall — that he grew up “very humble, very poor.”

He went into the drug business at 15 because there were no other jobs, he said. The area remains impoverish­ed. Nine in 10 residents of Badiraguat­o live in poverty or extreme poverty, according to government figures. It is the poorest county in Sinaloa.

It also has the fewest paved roads in the state — though ■ made of reinforced concrete.

Unabomber Ted Kaczynski, Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, Sept. 11 conspirato­r Zacarias Moussaoui and Oklahoma City bombing accomplice Terry Nichols are among those who call it home.

But Guzman, set to be sentenced in June for smuggling enormous amounts of narcotics into the US and having a hand in dozens of murders, would stand out even from Supermax’s infamous roster because of his there are plenty of dirt ones criss-crossing the mountains, leading to the fields.

With ‘El Chapo’ gone, the local economy has suffered, small business owners say.

“It used to be there were always people coming and going, transporti­ng stuff up into the mountains in 4x4s. Now it’s dead calm,” says Jaime Laija, who owns a restaurant on the main road into Badiraguat­o.

He, too, describes Guzman as a generous benefactor.

“He used to help the sick, give them money and things,” he says. Not everyone in Sinaloa is mourning, however.

Guzman’s extraditio­n unleashed an initial period of instabilit­y in the state, as his sons waged war with his cartel cofounder, Ismael ‘El Mayo’ Zambada, for control, leaving a trail almost mythical reputation for breaking out.

That includes a sensationa­l 2015 escape from the maximum-security Altiplano prison in central Mexico, where he communicat­ed with accomplice­s for weeks via cellphone, slipped into an escape hatch beneath his shower, hopped on the back of a waiting motorcycle and sped through a mile-long, hand-dug tunnel to freedom. of bodies in their wake. But the situation has now stabilised under Zambada.

And the brutal violence ‘El Chapo’ sowed in the state has actually diminished, say local authoritie­s.

He gave people money to buy things, gave them seeds to plant [drugs]. Now there’s nobody to do that. Hardly anyone is planting crops, since Mr Chapo is the one they all sold to.”

Moral victory

“Fortunatel­y there has been a downward trend. After [Guzman] was extradited (to the United States), the cartel fragmented, but now things have stabilised and the crime rate is trending down,” says Cristobal Castaneda, the state’s public security secretary.

However, while taking out ‘El Chapo’ is “a great moral victory,” his conviction changes little on the ground, says Mike Vigil, former head of internatio­nal operations for the US Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion.

“The Sinaloa cartel will continue to operate the same,” he told AFP. “They are just as powerful as ever,” he said.

However, that is not the case in forgotten Badiraguat­o — where many are hoping ‘El Chapo’ will somehow pull off his third prison escape.

 ?? AP ?? Mexican drug kingpin Joaquin ‘El Chapo’ Guzman (centre) may be sent to ADX Supermax in Florence, Colorado.
AP Mexican drug kingpin Joaquin ‘El Chapo’ Guzman (centre) may be sent to ADX Supermax in Florence, Colorado.

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