The Guardian (USA)

Top Mexican drug kingpin El Mencho reportedly builds own private hospital

- Tom Phillips in Mexico City

One of Mexico’s most wanted drug lords, El Mencho, is reported to have built his own private hospital in the western state of Jalisco.

The cartel boss – whose real name is Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes – has become the region’s pre-eminent villain in recent months and grabbed headlines in June after his assassins allegedly launched a brazen pre-dawn attempt to murder Mexico City’s police chief.

Earlier this month a viral social media video purportedl­y showing scores of El Mencho’s heavily armed foot soldiers added to that notoriety – although Mexico’s government has questioned the veracity of the footage.

This week, fresh claims about the head of Mexico’s Jalisco New Generation cartel emerged, alleging he had bankrolled the constructi­on of a hospital.

Citing intelligen­ce reports, the El Universal newspaper said the 54-yearold drug lord had built the clinic in El Alcíhuatl, a village about 250km southwest of Jalisco’s capital, Guadalajar­a.

Latin American gangsters often keep medical profession­als on the payroll in order to avoid official hospitals in the event of being shot by security forces.

But El Mencho’s decision to build his own hospital reportedly stems from his reluctance to venture out of his network of rural hideouts – of which El Alcíhuatl is supposedly one – to seek treatment for kidney disease. The newspaper said the drug lord’s employees and locals also used the clinic.

El Universal called Villa Purificaci­ón, the municipali­ty where the village is located, one of the Jalisco cartel’s key stronghold­s. It was here that a Mexican

army helicopter was shot down with a rocket-propelled grenadedur­ing a failed 2015 attempt to capture its leader.

Since then the group – best known by its Spanish initials CJNG – has gone from strength to strength. In 2018 US authoritie­s declared it a “top priority”, announcing a $10m reward for informatio­n leading to El Mencho’s arrest.

The capo’s son was extradited to the

US to face drug traffickin­g charges in February this year, and his daughter arrested in Washington just days later. But El Mencho, who has replaced the now jailed “El Chapo” as Mexico’s highest-profile gangster, remains free.

Chris Dalby, an organized crime expert who studies Mexico’s cartel, said authoritie­s currently considered El Mencho “public enemy No 1”.

Under his command, the cartel had evolved into Mexico’s most powerful criminal organizati­on – smuggling huge quantities of cocaine, marijuana and synthetic drugs such asfentanyl into the US, as well as traffickin­g arms, people and fuel.

“The Jalisco cartel is the group that’s en vogue now,” said Dalby, the managing editor of InSight Crime, which tracks Latin American organized crime.

Dalby said that the cartel had taken advantage of the Covid-19 pandemic to “aggressive­ly expand” across Mexican states such as Zacatecas, Veracruz and Guanajuato. Yet relatively little was known about El Mencho himself.

“He’s very secretive. He does not show himself … He’s not a man of the people like El Chapo, who cultivated that cult of personalit­y, who was seen engaging with people, a little bit like Pablo Escobar. He’s part of an evolution of drug kingpins who want to keep themselves in the shadows.”

The group’s growing profile meant President Andrés Manuel López Obrador faced mounting pressure to catch the drug lord.

“If the Mexican army made a concerted effort, I’m sure they could find El Mencho and they could rub him out,” Dalby said.

“[But] it would make no difference. It would perhaps weaken the Jalisco cartel and fragment them. But it would not make Mexico any safer – because someone else would just take over.”

 ?? Photograph: Rebecca Blackwell/AP ?? Local police in Guanajuato state, to the east of Jalisco. Mexico’s president, Amlo, faces mounting pressure to catch El Mencho.
Photograph: Rebecca Blackwell/AP Local police in Guanajuato state, to the east of Jalisco. Mexico’s president, Amlo, faces mounting pressure to catch El Mencho.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States