SOUTH OF THE BORDER
Mexico deadlier than Iraq
<http://www.worldnetdaily.com/?pageId=80713>http://www.worldnetdaily.com/?pageId=80713
 

Body count exceeds 4,400 this year in wave of drug-related violence

Posted: November 11, 2008
1:00 am Eastern

By Chelsea Schilling
© 2008 WorldNetDaily

Drug-related bloodshed has killed more than 4,400 
people across Mexico this year – a body count 
that has already exceeded the U.S. military death 
toll of 4,192 in the Iraq war since March 20, 2003.

Violence involving soldiers, police and gangs has 
resulted in murders of 387 people in the first 
two weeks of October alone, and 58 killings were 
reported on Nov. 3, the day drug hitmen ambushed 
and killed two police officers with grenades and guns.

The violence is not letting up in Mexico, where 
brutal murders are reported daily. This month is no exception.

On Election Day, a jet carrying Interior 
Secretary Juan Camilo Mouriño, the second highest 
official of the Mexican government, crashed in 
Mexico City. Fourteen people, including Mouriño, 
were killed, and 40 were injured. Many people 
believe the plane was a cartel target because top 
crime-fighting officials were aboard, including 
former Assistant Attorney-General José Luis 
Santiago Vasconcelos – an official whose name was found on a hit list.

Mexican authorities claim there is no evidence 
that the plane was targeted.But according to a 
survey published by the Milenio newspaper, 56 
percent of Mexicans are refusing to believe the 
plane crash was an accident, even if police determine so.

This week, two disabled police officers were shot 
to death in Juarez, across the border from El 
paso, Texas. They were part of a special unit to 
help disabled people, the Associated Press 
reported. One officer was nearly blind while the other was wheelchair-bound.

Twelve police officers were murdered in the first 
week of November. Mexican gunmen armed with 
automatic rifles and grenades also riddled police 
chief Juan Manuel Pavon Felix and three other men 
with bullets in Nogales just last week, while 
another police chief, Alejandro Parada, was shot to death Friday.

Another man was handcuffed, decapitated and put 
into a plastic bag hanging from a Juarez bridge. 
His head was found in another bag in a nearby 
plaza. Kidnappers also murdered a 5-year-old boy 
in Mexico City by injecting his heart with acid.

(Story continues below)



Gunfire erupted Friday after Mexican drug gangs 
clashed inside a Mazatlan prison, killing five 
people. According to a Reuters report, guns and 
drugs are common in most Mexican prisons filled 
with drug and organized-crime convicts.

This weekend also marked bloody deaths of 10 
people – including policemen – in Tijuana. Drug 
hitmen killed three of the men in drive-by 
shootings, the San Diego Union-Tribune reported.

Meanwhile, Mexican police captured the country's 
most feared death squad boss, Jaime "The Hummer" 
Gonzales this week, along with the largest arms 
collection in Mexico history – 540 rifles, 165 
grenades, 500,000 rounds of ammunition and 14 
sticks of TNT – all near the U.S. border.

The FBI said Gonzales is suspected of ordering 
dozens of hitmen to Reynosa for a confrontation 
with U.S. police, London's Telegraph reported.

Security analyst Fred Burton at the Austin, 
Texas-based Stratfor firm, a private intelligence 
and analysis company, told Voice of America he is 
concerned that the violence is spilling into the U.S.

"If you talk to the border sheriffs, which I do – 
if you talk to the police departments along the 
border, they will tell you they have a 
significant problem with cross-border abductions, 
murders, the homicide rate, and it impacts on us 
all in the United States," Burton said.

Santa Cruz County Sheriff Tony Estrada told Green 
Valley News, "When they go after cops, this is 
scary. It's the work of brazen, seemingly fearless executioners."

He said the violence can easily spill over into 
the U.S.: "The border is an invisible line."

Meanwhile, the U.S. State Department issued a 
travel advisory in October for Americans who 
visit Mexico. Public shootouts, muggings, murders 
and bank robberies are rampant – even in broad 
daylight – and Mexican criminals harass U.S. travelers along border regions.

"Some recent Mexican army and police 
confrontations with drug cartels have taken on 
the characteristics of small-unit combat, with 
cartels employing automatic weapons and, on 
occasion, grenades," the State Department warned.

Meanwhile, Mexican officials have launched a 
desperate campaign to draw American tourists back 
into Juarez after many decided to stay away from 
the region, the Associated Press reports. 
Billboards tout the city as the "land of encounters."


<*}}}>< <http://www.holypostage.com/>Holy Postage <*}}}><
<*}}}><<http://www.halfthekingdom.org/>Half the Kingdom!<*}}}><

Prayer for Unborn Life:
O GOD OF LIFE AND LOVE, You have given us the 
gift to participate with You to bring new life 
into the world.  But, all too often, the mother's 
womb, which should be a nursery of life, becomes 
instead a place of it's destruction.

Help us to remove this evil and ensure respect 
for all life made in Your image and likeness, 
called to fulfill its promise on this earth,
and destined to find a home with you for all eternity.

We ask this through Jesus Christ, Our Lord, Our God, Our Savior, and Our ALL.
Amen.

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