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  • Mexican authorities are working to identify 28 bodies found in 6 mass graves outside the

  • city

  • of Iguala. Evidence indicates that these may be some of the bodies of those 43

  • students who recently went missing after a clash with local police during a protest - an

  • incident

  • that involved officers killing at least 6 people. The situation in Iguala is bad, but

  • a closer look at

  • this incident and the recent history of mass killings in Mexico tells an even darker story.

  • There are reports of the police handing the students over to a local drug cartel. One

  • of the

  • suspected killers has already admitted to that. But authorities can’t be absolutely

  • certain

  • that these are the missing students until DNA testing is complete, because the bodies

  • could

  • also belong to literally thousands of other people. Mass killings by drug cartels - and

  • the law

  • enforcement agencies tasked with fighting those cartels - happen with alarming regularity

  • in

  • Mexico. This incident is the 4th widely reported mass killing this year alone - and it’s

  • more than

  • likely that most incidents aren’t even being reported.

  • When the last President of Mexico left office, over 26,000 people were reported missing.

  • The

  • current President, Enrique Peña Nieto, revised that number down to

  • 8,000, but after public outcry, he revised the number back up to 16,000. But all three

  • of those

  • estimates are still far lower than what some human rights groups claim as the real number.

  • Things have gotten so bad in Mexico that according to some reports, drug-related violence has

  • claimed more than 70,000 lives since 2006. So, why did this situation get so out of hand?

  • Well, in 2006, the Mexican government along with the US Drug Enforcement Agency, started

  • targeting the heads of drug cartels. They captured or killed 30 of the 37 most wanted

  • cartel

  • leaders. And without their leaders, those cartels broke into hundreds of separate factions

  • and alliances that began warring against each other with greater frequency and brutality.

  • We

  • basically cut the head off the snake, but instead of the snake dying, it just created

  • thousands of

  • smaller more violent snakes.

  • When Mr. Peña Nieto became Mexico’s new President in 2012, he changed the

  • strategy in their war on drugs. He shifted the focus away from cartel leaders and put

  • it

  • on local law enforcement stopping drug violence instead. He also struck a deal to allow

  • vigilante groups to keep their weapons as long as they agreed to be integrated into

  • official security forces. But corruption among local law enforcement is widespread, so

  • in a lot of regions the people tasked with stopping the cartels are the very same people

  • who are working for them. Hence, the accusations that police handed the student

  • protesters over to the cartel in the recent incident in Iguala.

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Mexican authorities are working to identify 28 bodies found in 6 mass graves outside the

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