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miércoles, enero 09, 2008

NOTAS VARIAS

BAZUCAZOS

Tal y como lo reportó El Waldy hace una hora, en efecto hubo un enfrentamiento de narcos con AFIs en Tamaulipas. Y en efecto hubo un bazucazo. En el enfrentamiento murieron 2 AFIs y uno resultó herido de gravedad.

Pero lo que me llama la atención es que, según la nota del Reforma donde se da a conocer esto, es que los que usaron la bazuka fueron los AFIs:

De acuerdo con testigos presenciales, el enfrentamiento fue muy rápido y eran los elementos de la AFI quienes perseguían a los presuntos narcotraficantes, pero ya los esperaban refuerzos del crimen organizado y los atacaron.

Según testigos, los AFIs alcanzaron a sacar una bazuca y la activaron contra una camioneta Avalanche que se incendió en el acto, pero los sicarios los acribillaron y sólo uno de ellos quedó vivo.


Es decir, los narcos tuvieron más colmillo para emboscar a los AFIs, lo cual los desesperó y por consiguiente sacaron la bazuka.

Estoy es my grave. Quiere decir que entonces el narco va a responderle igual a la AFI, a la PFP y al ejército. ¿A ESO es a lo que fecal quería llevar al país? ¿Al caos de una verdadera GUERRA CIVIL?

Ah, por que hay otro detalle que se debe de señalar: en 2007 hubo casi las mismas muertes en la disque guerra contra el narco, que las que hubo en la guerra de Irak. No es choro. Según el New York Times, hubo 2592 muertes en Irak durante 2007. En México oficialmente hubo 2500 muertes por la disque guerra contra el narco. Y si consideramos que los narcos han aventado granadas a instalaciones de la PFP, entonces las bazukas dudo que los espanten.

Pero el verdadero problema no es ese, sino que esta violencia acabe siendo vista por la gente como "lo normal", y en una de esas un estallido social por las chingaderas del gobierno ESPURIO desate una situación de violencia por todo el país por culpa del PRIAN.

Con razón el CEROTE CON PATAS anda más cagado que de costumbre tanto en los pinos como cuando se atreve a salirse de su cuchitril.


PORFIRIO MUÑOZ LEDO AL FAP

Total que ahora Porfirio Muñoz Ledo es el coordinador del FAP, puesto que deja Jesús Ortega porque a él lo que le urge es que se desintegre el FAP para darle en la torre al Peje.

¿Es esto bueno o malo? Pues ni uno ni otro. En todo caso lo bueno es que Porfirio Muñoz Ledo ya no puede aspirar a huesos en el PRD--ni en ningún partido--por lo cual puede coordinar al FAP sin ese tipo de broncas. Malo en todo caso que hubieran puesto a Camacho Solís, como quería Nueva Izquierda. Porque si algo le han criticado al Peje es precisamente la presencia de Camacho Solís en el PRD y en la campaña del Peje.

Pero no; a pesar de los intentos de Nueva Izquierda por poner a Camacho, el Peje metió orden. Así lo da a conocer el Reforma:

Muñoz Ledo superó la propuesta de Manuel Camacho Solís, impulsada por Javier González Garza, Carlos Navarrete, Jesús Ortega y Guadalupe Acosta Naranjo.

La figura del ex representante de México ante la UE recibió el respaldo del Alberto Anaya, Ricardo Cantú, Dante Delgado, Alejandro Chanona, Marcelo Ebrard, Alejandro Encinas y Andrés Manuel López Obrador.

En un tibio intento por prolongar esa decisión, Acosta Naranjo en su calidad de secretario general del FAP pidió llevar al CEN del PRD esa propuesta para su disposición como partido mayoritario del Frente.

Sin embargo, el ex candidato presidencial, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, atajó ese planteamiento y pidió resolverlo en esa reunión.

Tras la postura de López Obrador surgió un consenso mayoritario a favor de Porfirio Muñoz Ledo.


Digamos que en todo caso Porfirio es inofensivo. Igual puede ir en el FAP o en cualquier parte. Malo que algún ambicioso que Nueva Izquierda quiera poner se quede con el FAP. Y no lo dijo por joder a Camacho Solís. Lo digo porque ya conocemos a Nueva Izquierda.


Una razón más para apoyar al peje en el 2008.

2 comentarios:

Anónimo dijo...

Mexico Security Memo: Jan. 7, 2008
January 7, 2008 | 1955 GMT
Graphic for Mexico Security Memo
Boosting Troops in Sinaloa

Patricio Patiño Arias, Mexico’s undersecretary of Police Intelligence Strategy of the federal Secretariat of Public Safety, said Dec. 28 that a total of 2,500 members of the Federal Preventive Police (PFP) will be sent to Sinaloa state in 2008 to help combat the Sinaloa Cartel. A full 1,000 troops were to be transferred in the first week of January. Patiño Arias’ announcement came during a public meeting in the state’s capital, Culiacán; Sinaloa Gov. Jesus Alberto Aguilar Padilla attended the ceremony.

The federal forces will concentrate their efforts on capturing Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán Loera — who was accused this week of paying some 3,000 protesters to stage marches designed to pressure the Sinaloa government to reject federal troops — and Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada García. Patiño Arias said that in addition to drug trafficking, the effort will pursue related crimes such as auto theft and arms trafficking. A particular operational emphasis will focus on gathering accurate intelligence in the region to permit an effective offensive against the cartel.

The initial influx of troops will concentrate on marijuana crop destruction in mountainous areas. A heftier patrol regimen also will be set up in Culiacán, Los Mochis and Mazatlán.

In addition to the police offensive, Patiño Arias said a new system for selecting and evaluating state officials will be enacted in an effort to reduce corruption in the ranks of public representatives. Patiño Arias hopes that with such measures in place the local government also could serve as a platform for evaluating the performance of — and corruption levels in — the PFP troops stationed in Sinaloa state.

The road to reduced corruption will be a long one, however. As with most measures to ensure government accountability in Mexico, the newly announced steps are unlikely to make a big difference. With the promise of lucrative bribes and the threat of a messy death, there is little incentive for public officials to decline cooperation with local cartels.

This commitment of troops is a good indication that the federal government is shifting its focus to tackle the Sinaloa cartel after a recent strong focus on challenging the Gulf cartel in Tamaulipas state. In the Tamaulipas effort, about 5,000 troops from the Mexican military had been dispatched as of December 2007. Similar troop deployments have totaled about 3,000 in the city of Tijuana and 6,500 in Michoacán state.

With about half as many forces committed to Sinaloa as are committed to fighting the Gulf Cartel in Tamaulipas, this week’s move could have only a limited impact on the Sinaloa cartel’s operational capacity. Even if more troops are introduced, however, the lasting impact of such operations is likely to be marginal given the strength of the drug trade.
The Kidnapping of Calderon’s Cousin

Mexican President Felipe Calderon’s cousin, Alfonso Reyes, was kidnapped while getting into his car with his wife in Morelia, Michoacán. Reyes was reportedly forced out of his vehicle, handcuffed, beaten and then forced into the kidnappers’ vehicle. He was released four hours later.

Mexican newspapers Reforma and Milenio reported the incident, which was confirmed later by Juan Luis Calderón, the president’s brother. Luis Calderón did not confirm whether a ransom was paid. Michoacán state authorities declined to pursue the case after ascertaining Reyes was returned to his house. Although the motivation for the kidnapping is unclear, it might have been due to a labor dispute related to Reyes’ ownership of several currency exchange bureaus in Michoacán.

What is clear is that as an increasingly common criminal strategy, kidnapping is something from which no one appears to be safe — not even family members of the president who has pursued some of the most aggressive action in decades against criminal elements in Mexico. This incident further emphasizes the degree to which kidnapping can be used for a variety of means, not only for extortion and murder, but also as a pressure tactic in labor disputes.
Mexico Security Memo Map - 080107
Dec. 27

* In four searches made in Aguililla, Arteaga and La Huacana, Guerrero state, the Mexican army arrested a suspected drug trafficker and confiscated weapons, drugs and police uniforms.
* The Mexican military transferred five men arrested for illegally possessing weapons into custody in Nuevo Leon state. The men were arrested after being spotted by neighbors patrolling the boundaries of a collective farm in Nuevo Leon.
* Mexican authorities detained four suspects after a firefight between the Mexican army and organized criminal elements in Cadereyta, Nuevo Leon, confiscating weapons — including firearms and grenades — and liberating two kidnapped individuals.
* Mexican authorities announced that in the previous three days, 14 people had been executed by firearms, four in Baja California state, seven in Durango state, two in Sinaloa state and one in Michoacán state.

Dec. 28

* Two men dressed in black chased a father and son, shooting the son to death with AK-47 s near Piedras Blancas in Michoacán state. The assailants have not been apprehended, nor has a motive been established.
* As part of an ongoing federal effort to assert control over the security environment in Playas de Rosarito in Baja California state, the Mexican army completely disarmed the city police.
* The bodies of elderly newlyweds Margarito López Maya and Margarita Vázquez Sánchez were found in their home in Ocotlán, Oaxaca. A substantial amount of money was stolen from the residence.
* Seven police officers were killed in a firefight with criminal elements in Jerez, Zacatecas state, bringing the total number of officers killed in the line of duty in 2007 to more than a dozen.
* Patricio Patiño Arias, Mexico’s undersecretary of Police Intelligence Strategy of the federal Secretariat of Public Safety, announced that 2,500 federal troops will be sent to Sinaloa state in 2008 to help combat the Sinaloa Cartel.

Dec. 29

* Two assailants posing as federal police assassinated Luis Eduardo Rodríguez Masso, the former director of the Tamaulipas Ministerial Police, with two gunshots to the head in a dance club in the center of Matamoros, Tamaulipas.

Dec. 30

* Two assassination attempts were made against indigenous leaders in the Mixtec region of Oaxaca state, one successful, one failed. Gunfire from multiple assailants killed Ramiro Francisco Pérez Mendoza in his home, while a gunman narrowly missed Rigoberto Rivera, hitting a bystander instead.

Dec. 31

* Police in Mexico state have captured Noé Vega Martínez (aka “El Pigy”), who has been accused of killing in 2005 a man known as “El Zapatero,” the leader of the gang “Los Rebeldes.”
* Two men were shot to death after arguing with an unknown assailant in Guerrero state.
* Two people, including a 14-year-old boy, were shot and wounded in Guerrero state.
* The body of a man was found shot twice in the head with a firearm tentatively identified as an R-15 rifle in Ciudad Lerdo, Durango state.

Jan. 1

* Three Mexican police officers were abducted, executed and dumped on a road near Playas de Rosarito in Baja California state, near the U.S. border. Government officials have said the murder was likely in response to the military’s increased presence in Playas de Rosarito.

Jan. 2

* Two bodies were found in different parts of Michoacán state. One man had been shot in the face and was left on the road to Playa Jardín. The other body was found strangled to death in a river in La Huacana.

Jan. 3

* Alfonso Reyes, a cousin of Mexican President Felipe Calderón, was briefly abducted in an incident media reports say could be linked to Reyes’ currency exchange business.
* A six-mile chase in Michoacán state ended when a pursuing vehicle carrying an unknown number of assailants hit the car José Carlos Nambo González was driving; the attackers opened fire with handguns, killing Nambo González.
* The PFP rescued Juan Luis Hernandez Ambriz, the director of Alijadores Hospital in Tampico, Tamaulipas state, who had just been kidnapped by three assailants. One kidnapper was killed in confrontation with police, and the other two were arrested.
* Two men incarcerated for kidnapping and extortion escaped from prison in Hidalgo state.
* A kidnapping ring made up of two married couples was broken up in Mexico state, liberating a woman who had been missing since Dec. 30. The couples had lured the victim with the promise of an accounting job. The kidnappers have been linked to the kidnapping and murder of Ramiro Chavez Castrejón, who was kidnapped, ransomed for $4,500, and then killed by his captors.

Jan. 4

* Two bodies, including that of former mayor of La Huacana, Michoacán state, were found in a car that had been set on fire in Michoacán.
* The body of a woman was found shot at least 22 times with a .22-caliber gun in her home in Morelia, Michoacán. She had been killed Dec. 30. Given that her house showed no signs of forced entry, police suspect she was acquainted with her killer.
* The bodies of three men shot to death were found in separate locations in Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua state. Only one of the victims has been identified.
* The body of an unknown man was found riddled with bullets in Uruapan, Michoacán state. This is the fifth such murder of 2008 in Michoacán state; the other murders occurred in Lázaro Cárdenas, La Huacana, Morelia and Nueva Italia.
* The burned body of a man who had been shot to death was found in Tulancingo, Hidalgo state.

Jan. 5

* Three federal agents were arrested in Tijuana, Baja California state, on charges of kidnapping a businessman.
* The body of a young woman was discovered in Tlalnepantla, Mexico state. Her family reported her missing the previous evening after unidentified individuals assaulted the young woman while she was on the phone with her sister.

Jan. 6

* A man presumed to be a member of the Mexican military was arrested after repeatedly stabbing a man at a taqueria in Cuautitlán, Mexico state. The stabbing victim later died of his wounds.
* The body of a man bearing the identification badge of a member of the Mexican Federal Agency of Investigations was found shot in the head on a sidewalk in Satélite, Mexico state.
* At least three violent deaths were reported in Guerrero state. Two bodies were found in the capital, Chilpancingo, while one was found in Ayutla de los Libres.

Anónimo dijo...

Tan malo el pinto como el colorado.. que pasa que no se generan nuevos valores ... yo creo que si los hay pero no los dejan avanzar. que llegue Muños Ledo a dirigir el FAP dice muchas cosas al respecto de este punto que señalo