Site icon The Truth About Guns

This is What Happens to A Disarmed Populace: Mexican Update Edition

Previous Post
Next Post

Borderland Beat has the latest fatality stats in the brutal “war on drugs” south of the border. [After the jump.] Actually, it isn’t really a “war on drugs.” It’s a war between drug cartels, with Mexican government forces weighing-in for one side or another depending on who’s paying the most for political patronage. At the same time, the Mexican authorities continue to crack down on civilian gun ownership, leaving millions of citizens defenseless against the drug thugs and their allies, who rape, torture, murder and intimidate the populace with near total impunity. eluniversaldf.mx reports “From December 24, 2012 date that launched the program ‘For Your Family,’ voluntary disarmament through March 2013 have collected a total of 4,282 firearms, 28,259 cartridges.” How many Mexican civilians have been incarcerated for illegal firearms? No se . . .

A total of 4,249 drug-related killings occurred in Mexico from December 2012, when President Enrique Peña Nieto took office, to March 2013, marking a drop of 14 percent from the comparable four-month period in 2011-2012, the Government Secretariat said.
Some 685 fewer murders occurred between Dec. 1, when Peña Nieto took office, and March 31, compared to the prior period, Deputy Government Secretary Eduardo Sanchez said.

Drug-related killings also fell 17 percent compared to the August-November 2012 period, Sanchez said.

A total of 184 law enforcement agents were murdered during the Peña Nieto administration’s first four months, the official said.

The war on drugs launched by former President Felipe Calderon, who was in office from 2006 to 2012, left about 70,000 people dead, or an average of 32 per day, in Mexico, officials say. Other figures put that numbers at around 150,000.

Calderon, of the conservative National Action Party, or PAN, deployed thousands of soldiers and Federal Police officers across the country to fight drug cartels.

Previous Post
Next Post
Exit mobile version