When does is start on the US side?

skyraider

Veteran Expediter
US Navy
Official: 140 Acapulco Schools Close Over Threats



by The Associated Press




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MEXICO CITY August 29, 2011, 10:55 pm ET
Only one week into the school year, 140 elementary schools in the Pacific resort city of Acapulco closed Monday after teachers refused to show up for fear of extortion threats and kidnappings by drug gangs.

About 600 teachers in the slums on Acapulco's mountainsides said they were intimidated by recent cases of extortion and abduction, said Julio Bernal, schools delegate for the southern Mexican state of Guerrero. Bernal said 140 of about 1,400 schools in Acapulco didn't open.

Two teachers said at least four of their peers had been kidnapped on the outskirts of Acapulco in the past eight days. The teachers agreed to discuss the situation only if their names were not used, saying they feared for their safety.

One of the teachers, who works at an elementary school, said she had seen men drive by the school with rifles sticking out vehicle windows. She said fellow teachers had received extortion threats demanding they give half of their salaries or face attack.

The second teacher said dozens of his peers have asked the government to assign more police officers to schools of six subdivisions but their plight has been ignored.

"Authorities are turning a deaf ear," he said.

Guerrero state police chief Ramon Almonte, who is in charge of school safety, didn't return calls seeking comment. But Almonte previously told reporters that no teacher had reported abductions to police in recent days.

Schools in the region have been caught in the middle of a vicious turf war between drug gangs.

Teachers and school administrators in Ciudad Juarez, a border city across from El Paso, Texas, have also reported receiving threats and extortion demands in the past. Last week, gunmen attacked a group of parents waiting for their children outside an elementary school in Juarez, wounding one man and four women.

Both Acapulco and Ciudad Juarez have been hit with a wave of drug violence since Mexican President Felipe Calderon launched an offensive in December 2006 against drug-trafficking organizations.

Police in Ciudad Juarez exhumed the skeletal remains, including five skulls, of seven people in a cotton field Monday. The Chihuahua state Attorney General's Office said officers suspected the bodies had been there for two years.

In southern Chihuahua state, police discovered seven bodies, of six men and one woman, buried together in a mountain town.

The victims were found in the town of Guachochi over the weekend. Authorities said most had been strangled, while one had been shot in the head. All the victims had their hands tied behind their backs.

The seven had gone missing earlier this month, authorities said Monday.

—##### Is this where one says, I wasnt a teacher so I did nothing and I knew they wouldnt come for me. Maybe next time its the preachers, or governor or whomever they want.:eek:
 

BillChaffey

Veteran Expediter
Owner/Operator
US Navy
Why not stop throwing money at the drug use in this country. Leaglize use. Some MORON O D'S what's the loss?.
 

tbubster

Seasoned Expediter
Ok so we got federal agents over there that work with their government officers.Now I belive for the most part most people can tell after working with someone for a while if they are really a good person or not.Now I think they should pick about 60-100 men out and bring them over here to do some kind of special forces training For one year then turn them lose to do what needs to be done.


The problem with making some drugs legal is that at some point it will be recognized as a disability.Dont think it can happen just look at alcohol.Then we wind up legally haveing to pay for their habit with our taxes.
 

greg334

Veteran Expediter
Now I think they should pick about 60-100 men out and bring them over here to do some kind of special forces training For one year then turn them lose to do what needs to be done.

Did you ever hear of the Los Zetas?

Some of the core group were trained by the United States at Ft. Hood and were part of the Mexican's Army elite.

So why make the mistake twice, and why do we have people from our immigration and DEA over there, maybe we need to be discussing an invasion as an actual national security issue to help the people shed themselves of their corrupt government and living in fear while protecting our country?
 

tbubster

Seasoned Expediter
They protest in the streets when we deport to many people.They protest in the streets when we make laws to make it tougher on illegals to be able to make it here.What do you think they are gonna do when we invade their country??????A country that as far as the rest of the world is concerned has not attacked us????Does not matter how we put it it will never be looked at as a national security issue.Not saying it should not be just saying it wont be.Just because something did not work once does not mean you dont give it another shot.This is why I ment let our agents that are over there working with their agents chose who gets picked!They are the ones who have first hand knowledge of their agents and which ones are really honest.all of these cartels need to be destroyed plain and simple.

Kind of funny with your stance on the conflicts we are already in you are saying we should invade mexico.
 
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greg334

Veteran Expediter
Well no matter, the only solution is to take all the money we have spent over there fighting something we can't control with people who we should use here and build one great big secure border.

It is a national security issue, more so than Afghanistan, NK, Iran and other parts of the world combined.
 
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