Archives For cartel

News of drug violence from Mexico, Colombia, Central America and elsewhere can be pretty depressing, and it’s easy to think of the narco-traffickers themselves as lost causes, beyond redemption. But AFP has a piece on a former gangster in Ciudad Juarez named Pedro Martin Nunez, who has been in and out of jail since he was a kid. His story of redemption is worth quoting at length:

But his cycle of violence stopped during a 14-year jail term, when he met evangelist groups visiting the jail and found redemption in religion.

He now works to convince other gangsters and drug addicts to follow his example in a city where more than 3,100 people died in attacks blamed on drug violence last year alone.

Nunez has set up “Former Prisoners Transformed to Transform,” a refuge in the center of Ciudad Juarez which houses around one dozen families.

The group also built a church in a dusty neighborhood on the outskirts of the city, with a few plastic chairs and musical instruments inside a large hall.

They have their work cut out for them as they try to extract criminals from gangs, Nunez said.

“You risk a lot. At the first attempt, they’ll break your hand. Then it’ll be a foot. Then they’ll kill you. It’s not something to take lightly.”

As well as prayers for former criminals, Nunez helps to negotiate jobs for them.

They receive half the salary and the other half is paid to their wives to look after their families — a necessary measure, according to Nunez.

“Some fathers have spent all their lives stealing money from their spouses or their families,” he said. “Ciudad Juarez is in such a mess because most of its problems start inside the home.”

The priest still attracts police surveillance with his green tattoos of skulls suggesting gang ties, but he says he can usually turn them away these days.

“I tell them: ‘That life is over, Christ is in my heart. You also need Christ in your heart.’ The officers usually stop the conversation at that point and we can leave,” he said, laughing.

It’s an encouraging reminder that there’s a lot more happening in Juarez than just the bloody headlines.

Terrible news coming out of Guatemala the past few days about a brutal massacre of 27 migrant farmers (some are reporting 29) in El Peten, the northern part of the country. It’s suspected that the Zetas, a Mexican drug cartel, are behind the killings. President Alvaro Colom has declared a ‘state of siege‘ in the region to enable police to go after the suspected killers. The Central American Politics blog has synthesized the varying news reports into one blog post.

Please pray for the peace of Guatemala.

Sad news from my homeland: The Economist reports that the “northern triangle� of Central America is now the most violent part of the world. The murder rates in El Salvador and Honduras are higher now than they were during those countries’ protracted civil wars.

Organized crime, in connection with the drug trade, appears to be the main factor. While Mexico has cracked down on drug cartels in recent years, demand in the U.S. for drugs from South America has remained high, and cartels seem to have simply moved their bases of operation a bit south. The fact that these countries still have large numbers of trained soldiers and guerillas from the civil war years, coupled with high unemployment rates, make the region a fertile breeding ground for cartel recruitment and proliferation. Even more troubling, cartels and maras (youth gangs) appear to be forming ties that could be difficult to untangle or stop.

In December the government of Guatemala declared a state of siege in Alta Verapaz, a region believed to be under the control of the notorious Zetas cartel from Mexico. While the declared aim was to push out the cartel, anyone who knows Guatemalan history can see why the suspension of human rights at the hands of military forces in indigenous areas is quite a troubling idea.

What all of this will mean for the country’s upcoming presidential election this year remains to be seen.

[Photo credit: AFP, via The Telegraph]