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Mexican navy patrols off Tijuana in drugs swoop
05 Jan 2007 23:06:02 GMT
Source: Reuters

By Noel Randewich

TIJUANA, Mexico, Jan 5 (Reuters) - Mexican navy ships patrolled off Pacific beaches near the U.S. border on Friday and soldiers in trucks cruised the streets of Tijuana in an anti-drugs crackdown in one of the country's toughest cities.

Helicopters hovered over downtown Tijuana, just south of the U.S. city of San Diego, and three ships sat off the nearby surfing beach of Popotla guarding the coast where traffickers offload South American cocaine headed to the United States.

Tijuana, a favorite weekend party town for U.S. college kids, has been caught up in a war between rival drugs gangs that killed some 2,000 people last year. The city records a murder almost every day and two kidnappings a week on average.

More than 4,000 soldiers, sailors, federal and state police poured into Tijuana this week as part of a state-by-state war on organized crime and drug cartels by new Mexican President Felipe Calderon.

Many of Tijuana's 2,300 municipal police angrily walked off the job late on Thursday after federal forces hauled their weapons off for inspection in a hunt for officers in cahoots with crime gangs.

The seizure of some 1,600 guns underscored a widespread belief that many low-paid local police work with criminals.

The police were bitter about losing their weapons.

"Tijuana is a very troubled city. Without guns, we are not prepared for these confrontations," said Enrique Salvida, an officer at a local police station where many were still handing over pistols and automatic rifles to the army.

Mexico's municipal police are so badly equipped that even honest officers are widely considered ineffective.

Tijuana is caught in a fight between the local Arellano Felix cartel and rival smugglers from the northwestern state of Sinaloa.

Calderon, who has made fighting drug gangs a priority since coming to power on Dec. 1, last month sent a 7,000-strong force to the western state of Michoacan which saw some 500 gangland-style killings last year.
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A wooden cross and flowers are seen outside the mine complex Pasta De Conchos, in Mexico's northern Coahuila state, near the Texan border, February 19, 2007. Dozens of poor Mexicans wept, prayed and sounded sirens on Monday to mark the first anniversary of a coal mine blast that killed 65 men, most of whom have never been recovered from underground.