Showing posts with label Colombia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Colombia. Show all posts

Saturday, 11 September 2010

Mexico drug crime is not as bad as Colombia

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The remark is an apparent contradiction to comments made by his Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton.

She said on Wednesday that the drug war in Mexico had begun to resemble the violence in Colombia 20 years ago.

But Mr Obama told a US Spanish-languange newspaper that there was no comparison between the two.

"Mexico is vast and progressive democracy, with a growing economy, and as a result you cannot compare what is happening in Mexico with what happened in Colombia 20 years ago," he told the Los Angeles-based daily La Opinion.
'Morphing'

Mrs Clinton made her remarks after a foreign policy speech at a think tank in Washington.

Drug cartels, she said, were "showing more and more indices of insurgencies".

The traffickers were "in some cases, morphing into or making common cause with what we would consider an insurgency in Mexico and in Central America", she said.

The violence was beginning to resemble Colombia of 20 years ago when insurgent groups controlled some 40% of the country, Mrs Clinton added.

Mexico rejected Mrs Clinton's analogy.

Speaking in Mexico City, a government spokesman said the only aspect that the Mexican and Colombian conflicts share is their root cause - a high demand for drugs in the US.

More than 28,000 people have died in drug-related violence in Mexico since President Felipe Calderon deployed the army to fight the cartels in 2006 and violence has spilled over into Central America.

Colombian Rebels Killed 8 Police Officers

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Left-wing rebels in Colombia have killed at least eight police officers and wounded several more in an attack on a town near the border with Ecuador.

The Farc rebels used gas canisters stuffed with explosives to bombard a police station in San Miguel, in the southern region of Putumayo.

Two rebels were killed in a subsequent firefight in the surrounding jungle.

It is the latest in a series of rebel attacks since President Juan Manuel Santos took office a month ago.

Juan Manuel Sabntos says,

    If they think that with an attack like this they are going to weaken us, they are completely wrong”

On Wednesday, an ambush on a patrol in the province of Caqueta left 14 police officers dead.

The BBC's Jeremy McDermott in Medellin says the attacks may be a tactic by the leader of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (Farc), Alfonso Cano, to force the government into peace talks.

However, Mr Santos declared that the increase in violence only hardened the resolve of the security forces to eradicate the "terrorist threat".

"If they think that with an attack like this they are going to weaken us, they are completely wrong," he said.

"We will respond with more force and more determination. We are not going to rest a single second until we have peace in this country."
Border commission

In Friday's attack, rebels fired homemade mortars at a barracks housing 80 police officers in San Miguel, close to a bridge linking Colombia and Ecuador, shortly before down.
Continue reading the main story

The police said they had foiled a rebel plan to occupy the town after intercepting radio communications.

Troops and air force planes were sent to pursue the rebels in the jungle.

Our correspondent says there are questions as to whether the attack came from Ecuador, where the rebels have been known to have presence.

Colombian Defence Minister Rodrigo Rivera said he had "communicated with Ecuador's Security Minister, Miguel Carvajal, who agreed to immediately activate the cross-border bi-national commission, to conduct a joint investigation into the facts".


However, Mr Carvajal later denied the attack had been launched from Ecuador, insisting its security forces had "full territorial control".

The Putumayo region is a traditional stronghold of the Farc, as well as a major cocaine-producing area.

Both the Farc and the smaller National Liberation Army (ELN) were severely weakened by the tough security policies of President Santos's predecessor, Alvaro Uribe.

Both groups have indicated that they are prepared to begin peace talks.

But Mr Santos has said that he is only prepared to talk to the rebels if they release all of the hostages they hold and stop attacks.