Friday, February 20, 2009

Mexican police chief quits after officers killed

Living so close to Jaurez ( Just 10 Miles ) it is very hard not to be concerned about The violence Across the Border ! when the cartel speaks You best pay attention ! A fellow co worker of mine found out the hard way when his brother was warned about his soon to be death ! He ran , They killed his family ! It's a sad fact , but when you play with fire you can get burnt ! when you get warned , run ! but take your family with you ! The police Chief , A smart man !
Short of a full military confrontation , what can you do ?


CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico (Reuters) - The police chief of one of the most violent cities on Mexico's northern border quit on Friday after drug gangs vowed to kill a police officer every 48 hours until he resigned.

Drug hitmen killed the deputy police chief in Ciudad Juarez

on Tuesday and another officer on Friday and left messages on their bodies warning they would murder more officers, police said.

"Don't be mistaken, enemies of Mexico. The decision I am taking is an intelligent one of life over death," police chief Roberto Orduna told a news conference in the city, where violence has reached giddy levels.
....

Orduna, a former soldier, took over the municipal police in Ciudad Juarez last year. The city saw an unprecedented 1,600 people killed in drug violence in 2008 as President Felipe Calderon's army-backed war on drug gangs sparked fresh turf wars between rival cartels across the country.

Calderon has begun putting senior military staff in charge of Mexico's ill-equipped, poorly paid municipal police to try and clean up forces that are deeply infiltrated by drug cartels fighting over smuggling routes to the United States.

Ciudad Juarez is the bloodiest front in Calderon's two-year-old fight against the cartels. Government officials say Mexico's most-wanted fugitive, Joaquin "Shorty" Guzman, is battling with the Juarez cartel for control of the city and killing corrupt cops working with rivals.

More than 50 police officers were murdered in Ciudad Juarez last year.

Calderon has sent some 45,000 troops and federal police across Mexico to fight drug gangs, but the death toll from drug violence soared to 6,000 people last year

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