News (Media Awareness Project) - Mexico: Calderon Calls on Mexicans to Unite Against Crime Gangs |
Title: | Mexico: Calderon Calls on Mexicans to Unite Against Crime Gangs |
Published On: | 2010-06-30 |
Source: | Los Angeles Times (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2010-07-01 03:00:56 |
MEXICO UNDER SIEGE
CALDERON CALLS ON MEXICANS TO UNITE AGAINST CRIME GANGS
Facing widespread dismay over the assassination of a leading
gubernatorial candidate, President Felipe Calderon on Tuesday urged
fellow Mexicans to join hands against the forces of organized crime
that he said were to blame.
The killing of Rodolfo Torre on Monday in northern Mexico has added
to Calderon's political headaches as voters are to head to the polls
Sunday in 14 states to pick a dozen governors and hundreds of mayors
and lawmakers.
"United, Mexicans can and will overcome a common enemy that today
threatens to destroy not only our tranquillity but our democratic
institutions," Calderon said in a broadcast message. "It's in the
divisions between Mexicans where criminals find spaces and
vulnerabilities to harm Mexico."
Torre was leading polls in the border state of Tamaulipas. His death
in a highway ambush, which also killed four members of his campaign
team, was the latest sign of a deteriorating security situation as
Calderon pursues an offensive against drug traffickers.
Drug-related violence has left more than 23,000 people dead since
Calderon, of the conservative National Action Party, or PAN, launched
his anti-crime offensive upon taking office in late 2006. Amid the
rising carnage, he recently has delivered lengthy messages to
convince Mexicans that the crackdown is needed to save the nation
from the grip of criminal gangs.
Calderon appeared to have political concerns in mind Tuesday as he
urged critics in rival parties to join in a "frank, respectful and
constructive" discussion aimed at forging a shared crime strategy.
"In the face of the challenge that organized crime poses today, there
is no margin for seeking political dividends," he said.
As the death toll has risen, Calderon's rivals in the Institutional
Revolutionary Party, or PRI, and left-leaning Democratic Revolution
Party have increasingly assailed the government's crackdown as ineffective.
In Tamaulipas, governors and officials with the PRI, Torre's party,
joined hundreds of other mourners at a memorial service in the state
capital, Ciudad Victoria.
PRI officials had yet to name a replacement candidate. Some polls had
shown Torre having a lead of 30 percentage points or more over Jose
Julian Sacramento Garza of the PAN.
Officials in Tamaulipas said elections in the state - to pick the
governor, 43 mayors and 36 state legislators - would be held Sunday as planned.
The state is a PRI stronghold with a long history of suspected
collusion between elected politicians and traffickers. For months,
Tamaulipas has been the setting for a bloody battle between the Gulf
cartel and former allies known as the Zetas.
Calderon blamed organized crime gangs for the assassination, but did
not name a specific group.
The slaying set off shock waves, prompting some commentators to ask
whether it might stir a largely passive society into concerted action
against crime. Others saw it as a sign both of how deeply criminal
groups had infiltrated Mexico's political system through bribery and
intimidation and of how much they wanted still more influence.
"Organized crime has voted. It imposed its will by means of
violence," said an unusual editorial in the daily Reforma newspaper,
run on the front page. "It stole from the people the ability to elect."
CALDERON CALLS ON MEXICANS TO UNITE AGAINST CRIME GANGS
Facing widespread dismay over the assassination of a leading
gubernatorial candidate, President Felipe Calderon on Tuesday urged
fellow Mexicans to join hands against the forces of organized crime
that he said were to blame.
The killing of Rodolfo Torre on Monday in northern Mexico has added
to Calderon's political headaches as voters are to head to the polls
Sunday in 14 states to pick a dozen governors and hundreds of mayors
and lawmakers.
"United, Mexicans can and will overcome a common enemy that today
threatens to destroy not only our tranquillity but our democratic
institutions," Calderon said in a broadcast message. "It's in the
divisions between Mexicans where criminals find spaces and
vulnerabilities to harm Mexico."
Torre was leading polls in the border state of Tamaulipas. His death
in a highway ambush, which also killed four members of his campaign
team, was the latest sign of a deteriorating security situation as
Calderon pursues an offensive against drug traffickers.
Drug-related violence has left more than 23,000 people dead since
Calderon, of the conservative National Action Party, or PAN, launched
his anti-crime offensive upon taking office in late 2006. Amid the
rising carnage, he recently has delivered lengthy messages to
convince Mexicans that the crackdown is needed to save the nation
from the grip of criminal gangs.
Calderon appeared to have political concerns in mind Tuesday as he
urged critics in rival parties to join in a "frank, respectful and
constructive" discussion aimed at forging a shared crime strategy.
"In the face of the challenge that organized crime poses today, there
is no margin for seeking political dividends," he said.
As the death toll has risen, Calderon's rivals in the Institutional
Revolutionary Party, or PRI, and left-leaning Democratic Revolution
Party have increasingly assailed the government's crackdown as ineffective.
In Tamaulipas, governors and officials with the PRI, Torre's party,
joined hundreds of other mourners at a memorial service in the state
capital, Ciudad Victoria.
PRI officials had yet to name a replacement candidate. Some polls had
shown Torre having a lead of 30 percentage points or more over Jose
Julian Sacramento Garza of the PAN.
Officials in Tamaulipas said elections in the state - to pick the
governor, 43 mayors and 36 state legislators - would be held Sunday as planned.
The state is a PRI stronghold with a long history of suspected
collusion between elected politicians and traffickers. For months,
Tamaulipas has been the setting for a bloody battle between the Gulf
cartel and former allies known as the Zetas.
Calderon blamed organized crime gangs for the assassination, but did
not name a specific group.
The slaying set off shock waves, prompting some commentators to ask
whether it might stir a largely passive society into concerted action
against crime. Others saw it as a sign both of how deeply criminal
groups had infiltrated Mexico's political system through bribery and
intimidation and of how much they wanted still more influence.
"Organized crime has voted. It imposed its will by means of
violence," said an unusual editorial in the daily Reforma newspaper,
run on the front page. "It stole from the people the ability to elect."
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