two months pass...
two months pass...
two months pass...
I just don't get the US at all - it's like, a country with whom you share hundreds of miles of border with is being completely destabilized by your policies and your response is to...do nothing? stick your head in the sand? idgi.
― dayo, Tuesday, August 31, 2010 5:16 PM (seven years ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
it's not just the US...and it's not just Mexico either...
― rotting-month story (Drugs A. Money), Tuesday, August 31, 2010 5:50 PM (seven years ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
yeah that's the big problem there. every move is just baby steps in the right direction rather than a solve-all-problems move.
― ('_') (omar little), Wednesday, September 1, 2010 5:16 PM (seven years ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
yeah I know. it's just that it's like, you live in a pretty nice house, you have a nice life. the house next door is a crackhouse. what are you gonna do, build a higher fence?
― shorn_blond.avi (dayo), Wednesday, September 1, 2010 5:21 PM (seven years ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
:(
― omar little, Monday, 29 January 2018 21:23 (six years ago) link
two months pass...
one month passes...
four months pass...
https://worldjusticenews.com/news/2018/10/18/marbella-ibarra-mexican-womens-football-pioneer-killed/
One of the main promoters of women’s football in Mexico, Marbella Ibarra, has been killed.Ms Ibarra, 44, was the founder of Mexico’s first professional women’s football team, Xolas de Tijuana.
Her body, which showed signs of torture, was found wrapped in plastic sheeting in Rosarito, a beach resort south of the border city of Tijuana.
She had disappeared last month and her family believe she was kidnapped. The motive behind her murder is unclear.
Officials said a post-mortem examination would be carried out to determine the exact cause of her death, but the case was being treated as murder.
Her hands and feet had been tied and she had been severely beaten. She is believed to have been killed on Friday but her body was not found until Monday.
‘The best coach’
Investigators say they think her murder is unrelated to her role as coach and football promoter.
Most recently Ms Ibarra had dedicated her time to a foundation helping young female footballer players financially so they could have trials with teams other than their local ones.
There was an outpouring of grief on social media, with many players recalling the influence Ms Ibarra had had on them and the support she had offered.
Her niece Fabiola Ibarra, who plays for Guadalajara-based football club Atlas Femenil and the Mexican national women’s team, wrote that she would “hang on to all the beautiful moments I had with you and all that you did for me, you are the best friend, the best aunt and the best coach!”
Ms Ibarra had not been a player herself but used her income from the beauty salon she ran to first fund an amateur women’s team, Isamar FC.
She then founded the professional team Xolas de Tijuana, which first played across the border in the US women’s league as there was no professional women’s league in Mexico at the time.
Ms Ibarra fought hard for women’s football to be recognised and played a key role in the creation of the professional women’s league in 2017.
Her sister Mabel described her as being “football mad”.
While Tijuana, the city where she was based, has long suffered from violence it has recently seen an upsurge in murders.
July of this year was the most violent month in the city’s recorded history, with 251 homicides.
Many of the murders are linked to the dugs trade but kidnappings and extortion are also common.
― omar little, Thursday, 18 October 2018 23:08 (five years ago) link
ten months pass...
Coatzacoalcos (Mexico) (AFP) - Gunmen burst into a Mexican strip club in a hail of bullets and killed at least 26 people as they trapped revellers inside and started a raging fire, officials said Wednesday.
President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador condemned the "shameful" attack in the city of Coatzacoalcos, and said federal authorities would investigate evidence it may have stemmed from collusion between local authorities and organized crime.
The Tuesday night attack, which officials said also left 11 people badly wounded, is the latest to rock the state of Veracruz, a flashpoint in bloody turf wars between Mexico's rival drug cartels and a hotbed of political corruption.
Survivors said gunmen sprayed bullets as they descended on the bar, the Caballo Blanco (White Horse), then blocked the exits and set the club alight.
Because of the loud reggaeton music pounding inside, many patrons and dancers did not even notice the attack until the bar was in flames, they said.
Authorities said many of the victims died of smoke inhalation. It was not immediately clear whether some died of gunshot wounds.
"They arrived in several vehicles, with rifles and pistols. They threatened the security guards at the door and took control of the entrance," one survivor told an AFP reporter, speaking on condition of anonymity, as frantic relatives gathered at the bar looking for their loved ones.
Veracruz Governor Cuitlahuac Garcia tweeted that authorities had identified one of the attackers as Ricardo "N" -- Mexican law bars the release of suspects' full names -- adding that he was a repeat offender known as "La Loca" ("The Crazy One").
The suspect was previously arrested last month, but was released by state prosecutors within 48 hours, Garcia said.
President Lopez Obrador said federal authorities would investigate why.
"There's a problem there that needs to be investigated regarding the actions of the Veracruz prosecutor's office," said Lopez Obrador, a leftist elected last year on an anti-corruption platform.
"There are two things going on here: one is this shameful act by organized crime, the most inhuman thing possible; the other, which is also reprehensible, is a possible conspiracy with the authorities," he told a news conference.
The Veracruz prosecutor's office denied wrongdoing, and said in a statement that it was in fact the federal prosecutor's office that released Ricardo "N."
Veracruz is one of the most violent states in the country.
Its location on the Gulf of Mexico coast makes it a strategic route for drug cartels and for human traffickers bringing undocumented migrants to the United States.
Coatzacoalcos, a port city of 235,000 people, has been among those hardest hit by the resulting violence.
The governor told reporters the group that attacked the White Horse was vying for control of the drug trade there.
Some survivors said the attackers doused the nightclub in gasoline to set it alight. Others said they threw Molotov cocktails.
The interior of the bar was wrecked and charred, with chairs overturned and debris littering the floor.
The naked body of a woman who had been mid-routine was sprawled on the dance floor next to the striptease poles.
Outside, anguished relatives cried and embraced as they waited for news, while soldiers, police and paramedics worked the scene.
"I just want to know if he's OK," said a mother looking for her son, an employee at the bar, after searching for him in vain at local hospitals.
"Have you seen my daughter? She was a dancer," said another.
Mexico, the chief supplier of narcotics to the United States, has been hit by a wave of violence since declaring war on drugs and deploying the army to fight its powerful cartels in 2006.
Since then, more than 250,000 people have been murdered, including a record 33,753 last year.
The situation in Veracruz has been particularly grim. Jailed ex-governor Javier Duarte (2010-2016) is accused of presiding over a rash of corruption and human rights abuses.
Two former state police chiefs and a string of ex-officials have been charged with running hit squads that abducted and presumably killed unwanted individuals during Duarte's administration.
― omar little, Wednesday, 28 August 2019 20:07 (four years ago) link
one month passes...
https://time.com/5700543/police-ambushed-mexico-aguililla/
(MORELIA, Mexico) — State police expected the worst when they ventured into the wild township of Aguililla to serve a single warrant. Commanders sent 42 officers in five trucks.It wasn’t enough. More than 30 suspected drug cartel gunmen were waiting for them Monday, some in vehicles that were apparently armored, prosecutors in Mexico’s western state of Michoacan said.
Officials said the gunmen opened up on the police convoy with .50 caliber sniper rifles and AR-15 and AK-47 assault rifles.
Thirteen officers were killed, some of their bodies still inside the patrol trucks when the vehicles were set afire. Nine other officers were wounded.
The attack — the worst on Mexican law enforcement in years — came in a state where violence blamed on drug gangs has jumped in recent months.
Authorities said the state police convoy was ambushed as it sought to enforce a judicial order at a home in El Aguaje, a town in the municipality of Aguililla, which is the reputed birthplace of Nemesio “Mencho” Oseguera, leader of the hyper-violent Jalisco New Generation cartel.
“No attack on the police will go unpunished, and this was a cowardly, devious attack because they laid an ambush in this area of the road,” Gov. Silvano Aureoles said.
Images published in Mexican media showed vehicles burning in the middle of a highway and messages apparently signed by Jalisco New Generation, one of Mexico’s most powerful and rising cartels. Aureoles said their authenticity was under investigation.
Later in the day, an Associated Press journalist saw two gutted patrol cars at the entrance to El Aguaje surrounded by hundreds of bullet casings. Two police trucks were towed away.
Streets were nearly empty as people apparently decided to stay indoors after the violent events.
After the attack, the area in western Mexico’s so-called “hot lands” was reinforced by federal and state security forces, which set up checkpoints to hunt for the assailants.
Michoacan, an important avocado-growing state, has recently has seen a spike in violence that has brought back memories of the bloodiest days of Mexico’s war on drug cartels between 2006 and 2012.
In August, police found 19 bodies in the town of Uruapan, including nine hung from a bridge. Later, an area roughly 45 miles (70 kilometers) north of Aguililla was the scene of fierce clashes between members of Jalisco New Generation and regional self-defense groups.
In 2013, civilian groups faced with what they said was state inaction armed themselves in Michoacan to fight the Knights Templar cartel, one of whose bases was Aguililla. They said they took up arms to defend themselves from kidnappings, extortion and killings by cartels. But some of the self-defense or vigilante groups later became infiltrated by cartels and gangs.
― omar little, Tuesday, 15 October 2019 20:11 (four years ago) link
two weeks pass...
one year passes...
one year passes...
eight months pass...
four months pass...