The Denver Post

Americans found quickly, but Mexico’smissing remain lost

- Bymark Stevenson

When four Americans were kidnapped in the border city ofmatamoro­s, authoritie­s rescued the survivors within days, but thousands of Mexicans remainmiss­ing in the state long associated with cartel violence — some in cases dating back more than a decade.

Mexican author it ies quickly blamed the local Gulf cartel for shooting up the Americans’ minivan after they crossed the border for cosmetic surgery Friday. They found the Americans — two dead, one wonded and one apparently unharmed — early Tuesday after a massive search involving squads of Mexican soldiers and National Guard troops.

By contrast, more than 112,000 Mexicans remain missing nationwide, in many cases years or decades after they disappeare­d. Although a convoy of armored Mexican military trucks extracted the Americans, the only ones searching for most of the missing Mexicans are their desperate relatives.

“If these people had been Mexicans, they might still be disappeare­d,” said Guadalupe Correa- Cabrera, an associate professor at George Mason University.

The rescue of the Americans provoked a special kind of fury in Tamaulipas, a border state long dominated by the warring Gulf and Northeast cartels, where the Network of Disappeare­d activist group estimates that 12,537 people remain missing.

Delia Quiroa, from the nearby city of Reynosa, has been looking for her brother Roberto for nine years, ever since he was kidnapped by gunmen— probably belonging to the Gulf cartel, the same group blamed for abducting the Americans— in March 2014.

Despite carrying out their own searches and pressuring authoritie­s to investigat­e, the family knows nothing about his whereabout­s.

Quiroa said the families of the missing “celebrate and give thanks to God that they found these four U. S. citizens,” but said “we wish the government would search for our disappeare­d with the same zeal and diligence.”

“We feel complete indignatio­n, desperatio­n, anguish, impotence and grief,” Quiroa said, because of “authoritie­s’ failure to actwhen Mexican families suffer the disappeara­nce of a relative.”

Volunteer search teams such as Quiroa’s often are forced to walk the deserts of northern Mexico with iron rods and shovels, looking for clandestin­e graves where the bodies of the relativesm­ay have been dumped.

Authoritie­s lack the manpower, equipment and training — and many say, the will — to investigat­e the abductions, much less arrest or punish those responsibl­e. Things are so bad that authoritie­s aren’t even able to identify tens of thousands of bodies that have been found.

Like everything else, the fact that Americans were involved in the most recent abduction may guarantee thatmexica­n authoritie­s go after the killers. About two dozen suspects, most from the Juarez cartel, have been arrested in connection with the 2019 killings of nine U.S. citizens — women and children — in the western border state of Sonora.

It is unclear exactly what faction of the Gulf cartel may have abducted the Americans in Matamoros last week. In Matamoros, Correa- Cabrera said, they are essentiall­y all offshoots of the Cardenas clan, whose leader, Osiel Cardenas Guillen, was arrested in 2003.

The gangs care little about bystanders. In 2021, gunmen from factions of the Gulf cartel drove through the streets of Reynosa randomly killing 15 passers-by just to intimidate their rivals.

The Mexican government claims that its “hugs not bullets” strategy— antipovert­y programs intended to reduce the number of recruits for drug gangs— has been working. The number of officially recognized homicides fell from 719 in 2020, to 707 in 2021 and 492 in 2022.

That, of course, doesn’t count all of the disappeare­d people. But things are clearly not as bad as the dark days of 2010 and 2011 in Tamaulipas, when drug cartels massacred 72 migrants or dragged passengers off passing buses and killed hundreds who refused to fight each other to the death.

Correa- Cabrera said the decline in killings and crimes inmatamoro­s in recent years may have been because the Cardenas clan reasserted control.

“It was clear that the Cardenas family had control of the territory and there was a peace, a sort of mafia peace” in Matamoros, Correa- Cabrera said, until early this year when it appeared to break down.

“At the start of this year, there began to be reports of a lot more extorsion by the same group that controls the city,” said the professor, who previously taught at the then University of Texas-brownsvill­e, just across the Rio Grande from Matamoros.

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