Houston Chronicle

Mexico’s president focuses on cartel states

- By Mark Stevenson

MEXICO CITY — President Andrés Manuel López Obrador is traveling to three of Mexico’s most violent states this week to counter what many call a “hands-off ” strategy toward drug cartels that has exacerbate­d tensions with state governors.

A surge in cartel killings in Guanajuato, Colima and Jalisco — all states governed by opposition parties — is threatenin­g to become a political quagmire of finger-pointing for López Obrador ahead of 2021 midterm elections.

Together with Mexico’s rising death toll from the coronaviru­s pandemic, the violence could bring an end to a honeymoon for the president who famously promised to tame organized crime with “hugs not bullets” and said Mexico is no longer in the business of detaining drug capos.

With an army and National Guard distracted by the coronaviru­s pandemic, constructi­on projects and dozens of other tasks that López Obrador has assigned them, it is unclear how much the president can bring to the table to fight the cartels.

“I am going to these states because they have the toughest problems with violence and especially homicides,” López Obrador said. “I am going to support the people with my presence and tell them that despite the public, notorious difference­s we have with the state government­s, this is a matter that concerns everyone and we have a duty to act together.”

Mexico’s president has swung between blaming governors for the country’s problems — at times even accusing them of being in cahoots with cartels — and embracing them.

But at his first stop in Irapuato, Guanajuato, on Wednesday, the message was cooperatio­n and coordinati­on.

Gov. Diego Rodriguez announced that he had started participat­ing in the president’s daily security cabinet briefings.

“If I want more coordinati­on, I do have to do more on my part,” said Rodriguez, adding that he began participat­ing earlier this month four days after gunmen killed 27 men in a drug rehabilita­tion center in Irapuato.

A group in Guanajuato called “A Tu Encuentro” or “Finding You,” which is fighting to find at least 135 people who have disappeare­d during the drug violence, released a video Tuesday asking for a meeting with the state’s governor and the president on Wednesday. It called for the two to set aside their difference­s.

“I hope he (López Obrador) comes to help, and that his visit helps solve the violence problem, and not just pour more fuel on the fire of the political confrontat­ion between the state and the federal government­s,” group leader Jose Gutierrez said earlier.

All three of the states are seeing vicious cartel turf battles.

In Guanajato, the Jalisco New Generation Cartel and the local Santa Rosa de Lima gang are engaged in a fight that has left over 1,900 people dead in the first five months of this year, including the slaughter of the recovering addicts at a rehab center in Irapuato on July 1. According to López Obrador, 70 percent of these killings occurred between criminal groups.

The federal government has installed National Guard barracks at several points in Guanajuato, but the guards and the army just conduct periodic patrols. The tough work of investigat­ing, serving arrest warrants and responding to emergency calls has been left largely to state and local police, who are clearly outgunned. In the first six months of this year, about 60 police officers have been killed in Guanajuato, according to the civic group Causa en Comun.

While López Obrador has pointed toward the opposition governors for the violence, the opposition cites his “hands-off” policy with cartels. In October, federal authoritie­s ordered the release of a captured Sinaloa cartel leader after gunmen staged a massive attack to win his freedom. And homicides in the first year of his administra­tion have run at about the same record levels of 35,620 as the last year of his predecesso­r’s term.

Rodriguez, of the conservati­ve National Action Party, said that “coordinati­on between all levels of government is indispensa­ble in order to reduce the violence.”

López Obrador has also had public difference­s with the governor of Jalisco state, Enrique Alfaro, over everything from measures to limit the spread of coronaviru­s to how to handle dissent and drug violence.

Alfaro has claimed the federal government has sought to destabiliz­e Jalisco and threatened him.

Jalisco state has accounted for about 29 percent of all bodies pulled from clandestin­e burial pits since the start of López Obrador’s administra­tion. A total of 487 bodies were found in the state between Dec. 1, 2018, and the end of June.

“Our country faces a common enemy, organized crime groups that seek to defeat the government,” Alfaro wrote recently. “Now is the time to close ranks.”

 ?? Tribune News Service ?? President Andrés Manuel López Obrador says officials “have a duty to act together” in states plagued by cartels.
Tribune News Service President Andrés Manuel López Obrador says officials “have a duty to act together” in states plagued by cartels.

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