![]() Sergio Gómez, lead singer for the top-selling K-Paz de la Sierra band, leaves his dressing room during his last show in the city of Morelia last Saturday. Gomez, who at the end of this show was kidnapped, tortured and strangled, is the latest victim of attacks that have driven fear into the heart of Mexico's music industry.
agencia esquema / the associated press
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Jorgensen Brooks Group Counselor Sales and Marketing Everready Glass Sales Reps Trades/Construction RANCHO RESORT MAINTANANCE POSITION Mechanical Komatsu Equipment Co Resident Field Mechanic Finance and Accounting Charles E. Gillman Company Accounting Specialist Health Care Sierra Tucson Eating Disorders Program Coordinator Administrative & Professional Tucson Urban League CEO/President WorldMusicians' slayings shock MexicoDrug lords strike singers affiliated with rival cartels
Cox News Service
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 12.09.2007
MEXICO CITY — Mexico is reeling from the gruesome executions of two popular musicians last week in a record year for drug violence, despite a yearlong military operation against Mexico's major drug cartels.
The high-profile murders have left many here feeling more vulnerable than ever to drug violence and wondering just how far it can reach. One musician was gunned down in her hospital bed, the other kidnapped after a concert, tortured and left on the side of the road.
According to counts kept by the press (the Mexican government doesn't publish such statistics) drug murders are on an unprecedented pace:
The Mexico City daily El Universal has counted 2,544 executions through Dec. 5, already more than the 2,221 executions it recorded all of last year. In 2001, the newspaper recorded 1,080 drug killings.
At one point during the year, Mexico was averaging more than 10 drug-related killings a day.
The grim statistics come amid the Mexican government's most concerted effort ever to curb the reach of drug traffickers. Mexican President Felipe Calderón has made public security the centerpiece of his first year in office, sending more than 10,000 soldiers and federal troops to confront the cartels in nearly a dozen states.
He also negotiated a $1.4 billion aid package from the United States to help fight the drug war that the U.S. Congress is debating.
But despite the federal troops, the violence has continued.
"We need to recognize that we are losing the war," wrote conservative political analyst Sergio Sarmiento this week in the Reforma newspaper. "The murdered artists are no different than the rest of the victims of crime in our country. Their deaths however, have the advantage of getting the people's attention."
The country has been most shaken by the death of Sergio Gómez, 34, the lead singer of the wildly popular group K-Paz de la Sierra. Gómez founded the band, which plays a style of music called Duranguense, featuring brass horns and fast-paced drums, as an immigrant in Chicago. Gómez reportedly had received threats warning his band not to play in their native state of Michoacan before he was kidnapped and killed.
The same week Gómez's body was discovered, Zayda Peña of Zayda y Los Culpables, was shot to death in her hospital room in Matamoros, across the border from Brownsville, Texas, after a botched assassination attempt.
A wave of violence
The singers' deaths were just part of a wave of violence this week: a former federal congressman and five companions were gunned down in the border city of Río Bravo, near McAllen, Texas. Days later, a police commander was killed in Tecate along the California border after a drug tunnel to the United States was uncovered.
Samuel González Ruiz, former head of a federal organized crime task force, said many singers have been branded as balladeers for particular cartels. When they sing within the territory of rival cartels, he said, they become targets.
"The cartels don't care about how they are seen by the public, they are worried about showing their absolute control of their territory, and they will impose their control at all costs," González said. "(Killing a singer) is like planting the flag of their cartel in the ground."
The Calderón administration has loudly trumpeted its successes in the last year: the government has made some historic drug seizures in recent months, including 23 million tons of cocaine in the port of Manzanillo, the world's largest narcotics seizure.
The government has also extradited a record number of drug lords to the U.S., including Osiel Cardenas, leader of the Gulf Cartel, which is disputing control of the U.S.-Mexico border with the Sinaloa Cartel.
But observers agree that no matter how much money or troops are thrown at the cartels, things won't improve without structural changes in Mexico's opaque legal system and notoriously corrupt police forces.
"If the Mexican government can't fight corruption (the U.S. aid package) will be useless," said Mexico City security analyst Jorge Chabat.
Mexico is considering overhauling its legal system, a reform that would give the system more transparency and, supporters hope, make judges less vulnerable to pressure from drug cartels.
In the last year, at least 8 musicians have been executed, all practitioners of grupera music, a catchall term describing a norteño- and ranchera-influenced music popular in rural areas. Most have also been singers of narco-corridos, songs that like gangster rap, chronicle the deeds of drug traffickers.
Find out what you need to know before traveling to Mexico at azstarnet.com/border
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