Mexico’s government decided Tuesday to increase military control over
security in the northeastern border state of Tamaulipas and purge
corrupt police to reverse a surge in drug cartel violence.
Clashes between cartel gunmen and troops as well as street gunfights
among gang members have left more than 80 people dead in the state since
April 5.
Authorities have blamed much of the recent violence on an internal
power struggle within the Gulf cartel following the arrests of key
leaders, but the gang has also been at war with the rival Zetas cartel
in recent years.
After
a national security meeting in Reynosa, which borders the US state of
Texas, Interior Minister Miguel Angel Osorio Chong announced a “new
phase” to break up gangs, seal off drug trafficking routes and ensure
residents can count on trustworthy police.
He said Tamaulipas will be divided into four security zones with a military officer in charge of each.
The authorities will widen the use of intelligence gathering to
combat cartels and boost security at ports, airports, border crossings
and roads.
Authorities will conduct reviews of the state and municipal police
forces as well as the Tamaulipas prosecutor’s office to get rid of bad
apples.
“We will not tolerate any public servant who has links with organized
crime or who has committed acts of corruption,” Osorio Chong said.
Osorio Chong insisted that the administration of President Enrique
Pena Nieto had made progress against organized crime, detaining eight of
the 12 most wanted men in Tamaulipas.
The violence in the state “can be explained in large part by the
breakdown within these groups caused by the strong actions of the
Mexican state,” the minister said.
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