This is my most dangerous Mexican experience.
City of Chihuahua - 2 1/2 hours south of Juarez |
When I lived in the city of Chihuahua, I lived close to Los
Americos, which is a major thoroughfare.
At the intersection I walked to most days, there was a McDonalds
Restaurant on one corner and across the street a Pemex gas station. There was always a police car parked in
the Pemex lot.
Across the street from the restaurant and gas station there
was a drug store. I went to the
drug store almost every day to purchase bottled water, and frequently a small
package of delicious chocolate covered cherry an alcohol mixture I've not found
anywhere else.
I was on my way to the drug store when I noticed a man lying
face down parallel to a vehicle. My first thought was that a traffic accident
had just occurred. But the vehicle
he was lying along side wasn't damaged, and it didn't look like any other
vehicle was involved in the mishap.
My next thought was that he had a stroke or something, and
that had caused his accident. But,
the way he was laying, neatly parallels to the vehicle, didn't make sense if he
had gotten out and had fallen on his way to get help.
My third thought, he had been shot. I didn't have my cell phone with me,
and so I couldn't call emergency.
Would anyone call emergency? I sat and watched.
Two men with a cell phone got out of their vehicle and made a phone
call.
I noticed, with interest, that the police car usually parked
in the Pemex gas station wasn't there.
The street was suddenly empty.
Businesses in the area locked their doors. The police arrived, cordoned off the area and asked me to
leave.
For a while, whenever I needed a taxi I called a particular
driver, I'll call him Philip. When
I told Philip about what had happened, he hadn't heard anything. But, the next time we met he told me
what he had been able to glean from his asking around.
He said that the man was an illegal after hours seller of
alcohol. There's a big alcohol
problem in Mexico, and one of the solutions to the problem is to prohibit the
sale of alcohol past a certain hour.
The dead man, who at first was only selling alcohol, was approached by
one of the drug cartels.
He was told
that he needed to add drugs to his product line. He had no choice.
Once he was doing business with one cartel, another cartel told him that
he had to buy from them. Talk
about being caught between a rock and a hard place! The man was a dead guy before he was actually shot.
There weren't any police in the Pemex station because they
were informed that the hit was going down.
"How did the drug cartel assassin know he was going to
be at that intersection at that time?" I asked.
"That's a good question, "
Philip said, " don't know."
I came up with a theory. Perhaps one of the cartels, the one that killed him,
suggested a meeting at McDonalds.
Philip thinks that the state of Chihuahua was better off
before Calderon declared his war on drugs. That's a story for another day.
5 comments:
... o.k. ... i just skipped it ...;-)
Would you like the thumbnail version? :-)
The war on drugs has caused a great deal of harm in the U.S. as well. Much has been said about the fact, but nothing has been done about it. If there's one thing the govt. hates, it's letting people live their own lives.
Hi Debbie:
Thanks for taking the time to comment on this complicated topic, and thanks for reading my blog.
I'm not sure what you're saying. But, I believe, why people use drugs is individual and complex. The "War on Drugs", I suppose, is a catch phrase for stopping the people who traffic. Trafficers feed on the weakness of others, don't you think?
What can be done, and what should be done by government is beyond my field of understanding.
Legalizing drugs, or decriminalizing them, may be a positive step toward helping those afflicted with addiction.
The poor dead guy was victimized by the trafficers, the crime of murder was definietly commited. I hope the police eventually got involved, but I doubt it.
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