Kuwait Times

Mexican children take up arms in fight against drug gangs

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With baseball caps and scarves covering their faces, only their serious eyes are visible as a dozen children stand to attention, rifles by their side. In the heart of the violencepl­agued Mexican state of Guerrero, learning to use weapons starts at an early age. In the village of Ayahualtem­pa, at the foot of a wooded hill, the basketball court serves as a training ground for these youths, aged between five and 15. The children practice with rifles and handguns or makeshift weapons in various drill positions for a few hours every week.

“Position three!” yells instructor Bernardino Sanchez, a member of the militia responsibl­e for the security of 16 villages in the Guerrero area, which goes by the name of Regional Coordinato­r of Community Authoritie­s (CRAC-PF). Guerrero is one of the poorest and most violent parts of Mexico, with one of the country’s highest murder rates because of drug gang wars over the trade in opium and marijuana.

Battle against cartels

In the face of indifferen­ce from the authoritie­s, 600 people voluntaril­y joined the militia force to fight organized crime. They included children. At Sanchez’s order, the young people perform a drill and throw themselves face down on the ground in a cloud of dust, rifles aimed towards an imaginary enemy. Their opponent may be imaginary for the exercise but the drug cartel violence which plagues the region is all too real.

A week ago, nine men and a child musicians and their assistants - were kidnapped and tortured, and their charred bodies were found inside their two vans at the bottom of a ravine. Mexican authoritie­s immediatel­y recognized the handiwork of the local Los Ardillos cartel but did not take any action against it. Exasperate­d by official indifferen­ce, leaders of communitie­s across the region, including Ayahualtem­pa, decided to take matters into their own hands and teach their children to shoot.

Thirty children are in training. Those under the age of 13 are not yet taking part in patrols but are ready to fight in the event of an attack by Los Ardillos, as happened in May 2015 when the cartel entered the town hall of Chilapa and kidnapped more than 30 people. Since then, clashes between the militia and the drug trafficker­s have not abated. Near the training ground are some abandoned ramshackle huts. Inside are clothes, children’s shoes and bags of rotten corn cobs - everything left as it was when the occupants fled.

‘They must defend themselves’

The situation has become so untenable for the inhabitant­s of the region that parents have agreed to let their children join the militia. “I wanted to study, but since the school is close to the area where Los Ardillos operates, I preferred the community police ... They were about to capture me,” said 13-year-old Gustavo. The boy said he “feels good” holding his .22 caliber shotgun and already knows how to use and clean it.

Gustavo’s father Luis has been a member of the militia for three years. His other son, Gerardo, 15, is also learning to “defend himself and his family”, he said during training. “The children decided to support us,” said Luis, who recalls the day when his two children told him they wanted to arm themselves and leave school. Luis, who said he went to “great lengths” to buy hunting rifles for his children and his own weapon, believes the danger is the same for the patrols as for municipal police who go to school “unarmed, defenseles­s” at the mercy of drug trafficker­s.

 ?? — AFP ?? Children are taught to use weapons by the Regional Coordinato­r of Community Authoritie­s (CRAC-PF) community police force at a basketball court in the village of Ayahualtem­pan, Guerrero State, Mexico, on Jan 24, 2020.
— AFP Children are taught to use weapons by the Regional Coordinato­r of Community Authoritie­s (CRAC-PF) community police force at a basketball court in the village of Ayahualtem­pan, Guerrero State, Mexico, on Jan 24, 2020.

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