San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

President places military in charge of border crossings

- By Mark Stevenson Mark Stevenson is an Associated Press writer.

MEXICO CITY — Mexico’s president is putting the army in charge of customs operations at borders and seaports to combat corruption and the massive smuggling of drugs and precursor chemicals.

President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador made the announceme­nt during a visit Friday to the Pacific coast port of Manzanillo, where some of the biggest multiton shipments of drugs and illicit chemicals have been seized over the past decade.

It was the latest in a series of new roles that Lopez Obrador has entrusted to the nation’s armed forces, which are now involved in everything from constructi­on of government projects to running tree nurseries.

The president said the traffickin­g through the port accounted for a lot of the violence in the state of Colima, where Manzanillo is located. Colima has the highest percapita homicide rate in Mexico, in part because drug cartels are believed to be fighting for control of ports and shipments coming through them.

“We have taken this decision about management of the port, because of the mismanagem­ent, the poor administra­tion of the seaports, the corruption, the smuggling of drugs into the country through these ports,” Lopez Obrador said. “This explains to a large extent why there are attacks and homicides in Colima.”

The army and the National Guard, which is mainly staffed with army members, are patroling hospitals and transporti­ng medical supplies for the pandemic, have been given an extended mandate to perform civilian policing roles and are running bulldozers to build a new airport outside Mexico City.

The army is also building thousands of new branch offices for a government­run bank. The Navy has been given control of all port captaincie­s and is in charge of removing sargasso seaweed choking some beaches at resorts on the Caribbean coast.

Most shipments of the synthetic opioid fentanyl, and precursor chemicals used to make it, are believed to come from Asia through Pacific coast ports like Manzanillo or Lazaro Cardenas, to the south. Cartels use the same route to import chemicals used to make methamphet­amines, often on an industrial scale.

In 2010, the Tax Administra­tion Service, which was previously in charge of customs, seized a thenrecord 200 metric tons of meth precursors at the Manzanillo port.

It would not be the first time the Mexican government has turned to the armed forces to try to solve the thorny problem of corruption and cartel domination at seaports.

In 2013, the government put the Navy in charge of the Lazaro Cardenas seaport in the neighborin­g state of Michoacan after the Knights Templar drug cartel reached such astonishin­g levels of control that it was found to be operating bulk freight yards and participat­ing in the iron ore trade at the port.

Mexico has also had a decadeslon­g history of struggling with corrupt customs inspectors. In 1991, Mexico fired nearly all 3,000 of its inspectors without warning, replacing them with younger, bettereduc­ated personnel in an effort to combat corruption and improve efficiency.

It was unclear whether the tax administra­tion service would remain in charge of customs at airports. But in any case, many of the inspection­s at airports and land border crossings — where most illicit weapons are smuggled — are already carried out by the military.

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