Results 1 to 7 of 7
  1. #1

    R.I.P.


    dirtydog's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Last Online
    @
    Location
    Pattaya Jomtien
    Posts
    58,763

    Hundreds of thousands of Mexicans protest killings

    Hundreds of thousands of Mexicans protest killings
    Sunday, August 31, 2008 10:36:27 AM
    By ALEXANDRA OLSON

    Hundreds of thousands of frustrated Mexicans, many carrying pictures of kidnapped loved ones, marched across the country Saturday to demand government action against a relentless tide of killings, abductions and shootouts.

    The mass candlelight protests were a challenge to the government of President Felipe Calderon, who has made fighting crime a priority and deployed more than 25,000 soldiers and federal police to wrest territory from powerful drug cartels.

    Cries of "enough" and "long live Mexico" rose up from sea of white-clad demonstrators filling Mexico City's enormous Zocalo square. The protesters held candles twinkling in Other World Photos

    Hundreds of thousands of Mexicans protest killings


    the darkness as they sang the national anthem before dispersing.
    "I've had enough. Kidnapping, corrupt police, a rotten judicial system," said Ricardo Robledo, a 43-year-old music producer who said he had been robbed numerous times. "This may begin a change."

    City officials refused to give a crowd estimate, but the Zocalo can hold nearly 100,000 people. Tens of thousands overflowed into the surrounding streets, unable to squeeze into the square. Thousands more protested in cities across the country.

    In the capital, Romana Quintera, 72, wore T-shirt with a photograph of her baby grandson, who was kidnapped for ransom five years ago when gunmen burst into her home and killed her niece. Two people imprisoned for the attack have refused to reveal the boy's fate, and Quintera said investigators have given up on the case.

    "We're desperate," she said, holding back tears. "We ask authorities with all our heart to be more sensitive. Maybe nothing like this has happened to them, or they would be more sensitive."

    Despite the arrest of several drug kingpins, little has improved the ground since the Calderon government began its crackdown.

    Homicides have surged as drug cartels battle each other for control of trafficking routes and stage vicious attacks against police nearly each day. In the gang-plagued border state of Chihuahua alone, there have been more than 800 killings this year, double the number during the same period last year.

    This week, a dozen headless bodies were found in the Yucatan Peninsula, home to Mexico's most popular beach resort, Cancun.

    While impoverished Mexicans stage almost daily strikes and protests, Saturday's marches brought out thousands of middle-class citizens who are often the targets of kidnappings. The protest was inspired by the abduction and murder of the 14-year-old son of a wealthy businessman -- a case that provoked an outcry when prosecutors said a police detective was a key participant in the abduction for ransom.

    The boy's father, Alejandro Marti, called on top government officials to quit if they could not stem the crime wave. His challenge became a rally cry at the march, where many held up signs with his words: "If you can't, resign."

    The first to arrive for the Mexico City protest was the family of 24-year-old Monica Alejandrina Ramirez, who was kidnapped on in 2004 and has not been heard from since.

    Hours before the march began, the family stood silently beneath the independence monument, holding up large banners with her picture. Some colleagues of her mother, a circus performer, walked on stilts and wore clown wigs to help draw attention.


    most frustrating thing has been the indolence of many of the authorities, their insensitivity," said her father, Manuel Ramirez Juarez, a family doctor. "I have often asked myself, why? Why me? Why my daughter?"

    Having staked his presidency on improving security, Calderon responded to the rising anger by summoning governors and mayors to a national security meeting, drawing up a a 74-point anti-crime plan.

    It included plans for better police recruiting and oversight systems, as well as an anti-kidnapping strategy within six months. The Defense Department promised to equip police with more powerful automatic weapons.

    Calderon has urged patience, warning that rooting out drug gangs and bringing security to the streets would not happen by decree.

    Neither will cleaning up and bolstering Mexico's police.

    In some northern towns, officers complain of having to share guns, and many have quit in terror after seeing colleagues killed in front of their homes.

    More than half of Mexico's state and municipal police officers have only a primary education, making it difficult for them to aspire to the highest ranks and salaries.

    Many are tempted to join the payrolls of criminal gangs.
    "When you go out, you go with fear -- are you going to make it home or not?" said Almicar Polanco, 42, marching with about 2,000 others in the border city of Tijuana, across from San Diego. He clutched a flier with a faded picture of his father-in-law, kidnapped two years earlier and missing ever since.

    -
    Associated Press writers Niko Price in Mexico City and Dan Keane in Tijuana contributed to this story.




    Here's the latest news for Sunday, August 31: Gustav a category 4 hurricane; New Orleans prepares to evacuate; Thousands protest violence in Mexico; Rep. Stephanie Tubbs Jones remembered.


  2. #2
    I am in Jail
    Camel Toe's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Last Online
    18-02-2017 @ 10:41 AM
    Location
    Guadalajara
    Posts
    3,717

    Protest leaders to meet president after mass Mexican marches

    MEXICO CITY (AFP) — The organizers of mass marches in which white-clad protesters lit up the streets of Mexico to protest escalating violence were Sunday to hand in their demands to the president.

    Towns and cities across the country's 32 states took part in Saturday's "Iluminemos Mexico" or "Let's Illuminate Mexico" protests to show a united front against escalating kidnappings and murders.

    Violence has spiked since President Felipe Calderon, who took office at the end of 2006, launched a crackdown on drug trafficking and related attacks, including the deployment of more than 36,000 soldiers across the country.

    Some 2,700 people have died so far this year in gangland-style killings -- more than in all of 2007 -- across the country, according to national media, and Mexico has overtaken Colombia and Iraq with its kidnapping record.

    Downtown Mexico City sparkled with a sea of twinkling lights as some 200,000 white-clad protesters carried candles in the largest in the wave of nationwide protests against surging crime late Saturday.

    The march organizers were to meet Sunday morning with right-wing Calderon, the president's office said. They planned to hand him a document with a string of requests, including proposals collected during the demonstrations.

    Police said late Saturday that 200,000 people had attended the Mexico City march, as thousands of others were reported at protests across the country.

    Organizers had hoped to emulate a similar march in 2004, when almost half a million protested against kidnappings and insecurity, forcing the government to carry out purges of the notoriously corrupt police and other reforms.

    The Reforma daily said Saturday that this week had been the most violent since Calderon launched his crackdown, with 167 murders, including 24 police officers killed and 21 decapitated bodies found.

    The recent high-profile kidnapping and assassination of 14-year-old Fernando Marti -- in which police were

    involved -- unleashed the most recent public outburst over insecurity and systemic corruption.

    Official figures suggest 323 kidnappings were carried out in Mexico in the first half of 2008, while one rights group reported 400 kidnappings so far this year, compared with 438 for the whole of last year.

    Many rights groups say two or three more kidnappings are committed for each one reported.

    Mexican leaders last week signed a national security pact, the latest such effort in recent years, with a promise to fight insecurity and police corruption.
    More people have been killed in the eight months of this year than in the whole of last year and rights groups have reported 400 kidnappings, compared to 438 in 2007. They claim that for every kidnapping reported two or three more take place.

    The case that sparked Saturday's protests, which saw white-clad demonstrators light candles in the centre of Mexico City and many other towns, was that of teenager Fernando Marti, who was found dead even though his father had paid a ransom.

    Police officers are reported to have been involved in the Marti kidnapping and one of the protesters' main demands is a clampdown on police corruption.

    Fernanda Solis, who joined the demonstration with a picture of her son who was murdered three years ago, echoed that call when she talked to RFI's French service correspondent Patrice Gouy.

    "I think the first thing that needs to be done is a clean-up of the police," she said. "Because everyone knows that they are the ones who commit the crimes. Even the chiefs are involved, because there's a lot of impunity, the law is not observed and there's corruption everywhere."

    Advertising executive Dany Aneros told correspondent James Blears that men in police uniform kidnapped him and held him in an official building.

    "I was just waiting outside a friend’s house in la Colonia Roma and finally these guys took me," he said.
    This is not what we have here. Mexicans are ten times tuffer than Thais. Mexico City is a 30,000,000+ never-sleep center of revolutionary Che-warship types. I give it three day before they break out the rifles.

  3. #3
    Thailand Expat
    JoGeAr's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Last Online
    14-10-2016 @ 10:13 PM
    Location
    Chonburi/Brisbane
    Posts
    1,879
    Jesus !! Camel Toe, can you please change your avatar !!

  4. #4
    I am in Jail
    Camel Toe's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Last Online
    18-02-2017 @ 10:41 AM
    Location
    Guadalajara
    Posts
    3,717
    Okay okay. Give me a couple if days to find a phatter one.

  5. #5
    My kind of town
    chitown's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Last Online
    @
    Posts
    12,520
    Quote Originally Posted by Camel Toe View Post
    Okay okay. Give me a couple if days to find a phatter one.
    How 'bout we give you a couple of reds instead

  6. #6
    I am in Jail
    Camel Toe's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Last Online
    18-02-2017 @ 10:41 AM
    Location
    Guadalajara
    Posts
    3,717
    To counter the four I just got for having her?

    I like yours, clean simple, to the point. It follows that ol' art school axiom, "let it speak for itself."

  7. #7
    Thailand Expat
    Agent_Smith's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
    Last Online
    08-01-2021 @ 04:12 AM
    Location
    Locked down tight
    Posts
    5,106
    It appears photoshopped to me.

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •