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Factbox: Worst attacks in Mexico's drug war

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MONTERREY, Mexico | Wed Aug 25, 2010 6:34pm EDT

MONTERREY, Mexico (Reuters) - Mexican marines found 72 bodies at a remote ranch near the U.S. border, the navy said Wednesday, the biggest single haul of bodies in an increasingly violent drug war.

Below are some of the worst attacks since President Felipe Calderon took office in December 2006 and declared war on powerful drug cartels. Some 28,000 people have been killed in drug-related violence since then.

* Sept 15, 2008 - Suspected members of the Zetas drug gang tossed grenades into a crowd celebrating Mexico's independence day in the western city of Morelia, killing eight people and wounding more than 100.

* Jan 31, 2010 - Suspected cartel hitmen killed 13 high school students and two adults at a party in Ciudad Juarez.

* March 13 - Hitmen killed three people linked to the U.S. consulate in Ciudad Juarez in March, provoking "outrage" from U.S. President Barack Obama.

* March 28 - Gunmen in northwestern Durango state killed 10 people, as young as 8 years old, after the pick-up truck they were traveling in sped through a roadblock on a highway in the drug-producing "Golden Triangle" region.

* June 7 - Police pulled 55 bodies out of in a mine in the colonial town of Taxco near Mexico City over several days. Some bodies were in advanced states of decomposition.

* June 11 - Two dozen heavily armed gunmen burst into a drug rehabilitation clinic in the northern city of Chihuahua and killed 19 addicts, ranging in age from 18 to 25.

* June 28 - Suspected cartel hitmen shot and killed a popular gubernatorial candidate in the northern state of Tamaulipas in the worst cartel attack on a politician to date. Rodolfo Torre, 46, and four aides from the opposition Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, were ambushed on their way to a campaign event for the July 4 state election.

* July 15 - A 22-pound (10-kilo) car bomb killed four people in Ciudad Juarez in a blast that was detonated by cell phone, the first such attack since Calderon took office.

* July 18 - Gunmen burst into a birthday party in the northern city of Torreon, using automatic weapons to kill 17 party-goers and wound 18 others. Mexican authorities later said those responsible were incarcerated cartel hitmen who were let out of jail by corrupt officials. The killers allegedly borrowed weapons and vehicles from prison guards and later returned to their cells.

* July 24 - Police unearthed 51 bodies in a grave outside Mexico's business capital Monterrey in northern Mexico over several days. Some corpses were burned beyond recognition.

* Aug 18 - The body of the mayor of Santiago, a colonial tourist town near Monterrey, was dumped on a rural road, two days after he was taken from his home. Calderon condemned the killing of Edelmiro Cavazos, the latest attack on public officials in an escalating drug war.

* Aug 25 - Marines found 58 men and 14 women at a ranch near the Gulf of Mexico in Tamaulipas state, some 90 miles from the Texas border, after a firefight with drug hitmen in which three gunmen and a marine died.

(Reporting by Robin Emmott in Monterrey, editing by Jackie Frank)

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Comments (2)
Coming soon to a city near you. Betcha can’t wait huh? All because of our government and DEA’s misguided policy to stop it. How’s that 40 year long war on drugs working for you in authority, just about got it licked do you. A few hundred billion more and for sure you’ll get it right.

Ever consider maybe you ought to try a different approach? One that has never been tried before and is remarkably simple? One that is guaranteed effective and guess what else, doesn’t require the destruction of civilized society, no more human heads deposited in school yards, won’t require another 22,000 murders and is accomplished at a mere fraction of the current cost to society.

Let me help you out. !st. Discontinue all current anti cartel activities and instead put all your resources to work, simultaneously buying the entire world crop of coca and poppies. Do what ever it takes to control the plant and deny cartel access , by buying the farmers crop and making them offers “they can’t refuse” or destroying the plant. Give up trying to keep supply the from users, by playing hide and seek with smugglers; rather deny supply to the drug suppliers, as their supply cannot be hidden or defended. It sits in the open for all to see.

This is known as getting to the root of the problem. Crop is easy to locate and easy to manage. One or two years with zero crop and every other drug activity beyond the plant itself is totally and immediately eliminated. No plants, no drugs. It is only necessary to control ONE thing. Let me repeat that, only ONE thing. That one thing is sitting out in the open with a big smile on it’s face, for everyone to see; saying look at me Mr.Sunshine, I can’t hide from you or I’ll die.

2nd. Oh sorry, I already mentioned there is only one thing necessary.

Aug 25, 2010 12:26pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
CMCL wrote:
Why are we fighting wars half way across the world when this is happening right at our doorstep?

Aug 25, 2010 1:44pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
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