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Mexico's violent drug war inspires bloody art

MEXICO CITY
Thu Jun 21, 2007 6:01pm EDT
The former governor of Quintana Roo state Mario Villanueva (C) is arrested by members of Mexico's Federal Investigative Agency (AFI) moments after he was released from the maximum security prison of El Altiplano, Mexico, June 21, 2007. Villanueva was arrested on an extradition request by the United States. REUTERS/Agencia MVT/Mario Vazquez de la Torre

MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Mexico's gruesome drug war and its hundreds of executions a year are the inspiration for an art exhibit of red-splattered blankets meant to represent shrouds used by hitmen to dispose of their victims.

World  |  Lifestyle

Rosa Maria Robles has laid tattered blankets, some of them with bits of plastic tape stuck to them, on floors in a museum in Sinaloa, a rural northern state that has long been a hotbed of drug smuggling and gangland murder.

Organized criminals in Mexico often cover the corpses of their victims, hands taped together and shot in the head, with a blanket before dumping them on quiet roads or abandoning them in the trunk of a car.

Robles exhibit, called the "Red Carpet" and open since May, had included blankets from actual crimes, complete with real blood, museum curator Rosa Maria Hass told Reuters.

"We decided to hand them over to the attorney general's office for investigation," Hass said, adding the artist has refused to say where she got them.

Evening news programs in Mexico regularly show images of forensic investigators photographing bodies draped in bloodied covers and the verb "to blanket" has taken on new meaning.

Another part of Robles' exhibition draws attention to beheadings, increasingly used by drug gangs to terrorize rival groups and even the army.

The government has sent the army to hotspots across Mexico to dismantle smuggling cartels battling for lucrative territory along the U.S. border, but there are few signs of improvement.



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