Violence threatens Mexico's soul
Opinion: Hillary should know it's not just about the drugs.
Already, friends tell me, conservative oligarchs are plotting the sort of shadowy death squads that poisoned Argentina — here, aimed at criminal bands rather than political foes.
Who knows how true this is. But the deepening societal rifts are clear enough. Just take a glance at the newspapers (Mexico still has plenty of them).
Want ads offer Ferrari convertibles for $375,000 or so, but front-page headlines suggest you need armed outriders if you drive one of them much beyond your steel gates.
In a poll by the daily La Reforma, Mexico City residents ranked public insecurity as a worse crisis than the economy by a five-to-one margin. In the last year, 20 percent were crime victims.
Faced with plummeting tourism and stalled investment, the government works hard to better Mexico’s image.
In mid-March, leaders from the president to low-hanging politicos assailed Forbes magazine for including Joaquin Guzman, the Sinaloa drug lord, on its annual billionaires’ list.
Calderon decried an orchestrated campaign. He told visiting U.S. investors: “Even the magazines not only attack and lie about our situation but also exalt criminals and glorify crime.”
But that left the obvious question. How did “El Chapo” Guzman, who escaped prison in a laundry cart back in 2001, manage to amass his billion dollars without getting recaptured?
The Forbes flap came just after the State Department issued warnings about visiting Mexico. And that was when college kids were deciding where to go for spring break.
In that sense, Mexico got a bad rap. Tourists are seldom targets if they stay out of the crossfire. I brought university students here on a reporting trip with little trepidation.
Police patrols watch as mariachis serenade the Plaza Garibaldi and crowds jam cafes in Condesa or the Zona Rosa. Visitors safely explore all those Mayan and Aztec treasures.
But the point is not whether Americans slip across the border for cheap booze or on which beaches students choose to vomit. It is about the nature of Mexico itself.
Narcotics are a large part of it. In 2008, more than 6,000 people were killed in drug violence, some tortured horribly and decapitated, with heads left on pikes. The pace continues.
Heavily deployed troops win pitched battles against armed cartel militias, but drug bosses counter with kidnappings and extortion that can bend justice in their favor.
Still, drugs are not why people barricade themselves behind steel slabs in the lovely hills of Chapultepec. “Insecurity” is a communicable disease, and people no longer trust each other.
This is tragic in a nation so rich in courtesy and character. Cheese enchiladas had a lot to do with it, but my lifelong passion for Mexico is because of its open-hearted soul.
For a lot of reasons — only some of them related to drugs — this is now at risk.
Mort Rosenblum, editor of the quarterly Dispatches, was senior foreign correspondent for the Associated Press from 1981 to 2004. He is a former editor of the International Herald Tribune. His 13 books include "Escaping Plato's Cave" and "Who Stole the News?" He lives in France.
Recent on Worldview:
Opinion: China has a President Hu, now Europe chooses President Who?
Michael Goldfarb - Worldview - November 20, 2009 21:12 ET
The process of elimination that led to Van Rompuy's appointment represents all that is institutionally wrong with the European Union.
Opinion: Silenced in the Sahara
Timothy Kustusch - Worldview - November 20, 2009 10:52 ET
"Saharawi Gandhi" was expelled from the Western Sahara and is now on hunger strike.
Opinion: How to finance the war in Afghanistan?
C.M. Sennot - Worldview - November 20, 2009 06:32 ET
A question that, for Obama, is likely to hit home all the way over there in China.
Opinion: How best to get things done in Afghanistan and elsewhere
Mort Rosenblum - Worldview - November 19, 2009 12:35 ET
Or, the art of speaking loudly behind a door firmly closed.
Opinion: In France, l’Etat is no longer moi
Mort Rosenblum - Worldview - November 17, 2009 06:41 ET
Dodging corruption charges and facing jail time, French leaders go out of their way to give Louis XIV a bad name.
International visitors buoy US tourism industry
Susan E. Reed - Worldview - November 15, 2009 09:30 ET
Despite dreary economic times, a favorable exchange rate beckons foreign tourists to the majestic Grand Circle and beyond.
Opinion: Everyone missed signs of change in eastern Europe
Tom Fenton - Worldview - November 14, 2009 16:43 ET
While reporters did not foresee the fall of the Berlin Wall, the on-the-ground reporting was important.
"Damned United" and the tragedy at Leeds
Mark Starr - Sports - November 13, 2009 21:56 ET
A genuine soccer movie tells the story of Brian Clough, the greatest soccer coach in England to never coach the national team.
Opinion: Nigeria proposes reform of oil industry
John Campbell - Worldview - November 12, 2009 15:39 ET
President Yar'Adua puts forward new legislation but it looks unlikely to effectively reform the industry.
Opinion: Stuck in neutral?
Michael Moran - Worldview - November 12, 2009 06:42 ET
Some Europeans who steered clear of the Cold War may be wavering 20 years later.
The European School: a microcosm of EU integration
William Echikson - Worldview - November 11, 2009 19:32 ET
Czech and Slovak students don't dwell on their countries' communist past.
Opinion: How history's first draft got it wrong
Michael Goldfarb - Worldview - November 11, 2009 12:34 ET
The fall of communism in eastern Europe was not, as Francis Fukuyama wrote, "the end of history."
Opinion: Gay rights go global
Peter Tatchell - Worldview - November 11, 2009 09:22 ET
Homophobia still rules much of the world, but gay people are winning gains in nearly every country.
How 'bout them apples?
C.M. Sennott - Worldview - November 11, 2009 08:24 ET
The U.S. can't compete with China's cheap labor costs and mega orchards in the global apple trade.
Opinion: How consumer choices can drive environmental change
Stephan Faris - Global Green - November 10, 2009 11:38 ET
When businesses realize that eco-friendly alternatives will help their bottom line, they take action.
Opinion: Incorporating lessons from Iraq
Mort Rosenblum - Worldview - November 10, 2009 06:55 ET
Rather than destroying a country in order to save it, turn to the hard slog of nation-building.
Opinion: The day after the Wall fell
Michael Moran - Worldview - November 9, 2009 17:55 ET
The fears of Germany and its neighbors in 1989 have largely been resolved by 2009.
Opinion: ALS, Lou Gehrig and Michael
Mark Starr - Worldview - November 8, 2009 10:16 ET
How one man's struggle with ALS called on Major League Baseball to take a stand.
Opinion: "Old fox" Mugabe outwits others
Douglas Rogers - Worldview - November 8, 2009 09:56 ET
Power-sharing government achieves some improvements but Mugabe still rules with iron fist.
Opinion: Why sanctions aren't the answer for Iran
Joel Brinkley - Worldview - November 6, 2009 15:45 ET
America needs to understand that punitive measures aren't going to keep Iran in check. Not when Russia and China have a lot to lose.
Watch GlobalPost videos:
Reporter's Notebook
Assistant Editor Stephanie S. Garlow pitched in recently to cover the story of a New Englander who was taken hostage on the high seas by Somali...Read more >
Angelica Marin, a Californian, and Fulvio Paolocci, an Italian, recently moved to Rome and file regular dispatches and multimedia for...Read more >
Gavin Blair lives in Japan and writes regular dispatches for GlobalPost: Land of rising communism The curse of the colonel Analysis: Japan looks...Read more >
Featured: Special Projects
After the Fall:
20 years since the Berlin Wall came down
Life, Death and the Taliban:
Videos and stories
Study Abroad:
Students report from the road
Living in the Shadows:
An intimate look at China's migrant workers
A World of Trouble:
The global economy in 20 hotspots
Global Blogs:




Comments:
No Comments.
Login or Register to post comments