Sol Prendido Borderland Beat Vice
AYAHUALTEMPA, Mexico — The boys
sling .22-caliber rifles over their shoulders, standing erect, their faces
covered with bandanas and caps to shield their identities. Their leader, Luis,
a scrawny figure with warm eyes, calls out commands. “Position four!” he yells
in a high-pitched voice. In unison, the dozen recruits fall to the floor of the
basketball court, belly-down, aiming their guns straight ahead.
Luis
is 13 years old.
Luis and his
barely adolescent friends are the latest enlistees in a self-defense group in
Mexico’s southwestern state of Guerrero, which sits at the heart of Mexico’s
heroin trade and has been wracked by violence in recent years. The militia is
training the boys, some as young as 6, to serve as the last line of defense
should a cartel strike the community, as it has others.
The
militia, known as CRAC-PF, emerged in 2014 in place of local police who were
considered corrupt, and stretched-thin federal and state security forces. Amid
a wave of violence and targeted attacks by a local drug cartel, they’ve taken
the drastic step of training children to use guns.
“We are preparing
the children because if they lose their parents, who is going to defend them?
What’s clear is that the government is not going to defend us and much less the
human rights advocates who criticize us,” said Bernardino Sánchez Luna, who
founded the group.
Government officials
and human rights groups accuse the militia of exploitation. Even in a country
accustomed to a steady drumbeat of violence, the images of the children in
military-style exercises published by local media earlier this year have
pierced the public consciousness, drawn comparisons to child soldiers, and
raised questions about whether this will become a new norm.
President Andrés
Manuel López Obrador said the militia should be “ashamed” for arming the boys.
“Training children to use weapons and then filming them is an abuse,” he said.
But
the boys’ training appears elementary at best, somewhere between guerrilla
warfare and Boy Scouts, as they practice the same positions on repeat. The
boys’ parents say it’s an act of desperation by a community that’s trapped by
violence on all sides. It’s also a gambit to get the attention of government
officials who they say have abandoned them.
Nestled in the
foothills of the Sierra Madre del Sur mountain range, Ayahualtempa is one of 16
indigenous communities protected by the militia. The communities are isolated
hamlets with limited cell service, accessible only by a winding two-lane
highway known as the “corridor of death,” as rival gangs fought for control of
the drug route and tussled with civilian militias.
The
violence detonated last year. A growing number of people from Ayahualtempa were
murdered when they ventured outside the village: one man shot in his car,
another kidnapped, a boy shot dead in broad daylight. Luis’ uncle was also
killed. “They hid it from me, but I learned he had been found dismembered,”
Luis said.
“They hid it from me, but I learned he had been found
dismembered.”
Ayahualtempa had
never received much government support, but now it was a target as the local
cartel tried to take control. The number of murders in the six miles around the
village more than doubled in 2019 from a year earlier, said Chris Kyle, a
professor at the University of Alabama at Birmingham who studies violence in
the region.
The
community went on virtual lockdown. Kids stopped going to school. The women
halted their weekly trips to the nearby city to do their shopping and sell
their beans and squash. The men ventured out only in convoys with a dozen armed
companions for fear of being ambushed.
“If we leave town, we might get kidnapped,” Luis said.
“If we leave town, we might get kidnapped,” Luis said.
In April, members
of the civilian militia took around a dozen boys on an eight-day retreat into
the mountains. Luis went with his older brother, 15. He listed off the things
they learned: “attacking armored vehicles, fighting off ambushes, rescuing
allies.”
“Drill commands
are for parades and celebrations, but shooting positions are for real enemy
encounters,” he said.
Boys 12 and older were given guns, a mix of 22-caliber rifles and 20-gauge
shotguns. The younger boys practiced with sticks and toys, in preparation for
the day when they can carry guns.
s named a leader of the group because he didn’t miss a day of training. But
at school, his teacher told him he was at risk of being expelled because he had
skipped so many days. Luis loved school — math class in particular — but his
mom was terrified every time he went.
While just a 30-minute walk from the village, the middle school is in territory controlled by the drug cartel. Parents were terrified. By summer, Luis and his brother and sister stopped attending school because of the violence, as did most of the older kids in the community.
While just a 30-minute walk from the village, the middle school is in territory controlled by the drug cartel. Parents were terrified. By summer, Luis and his brother and sister stopped attending school because of the violence, as did most of the older kids in the community.
“Of course, it makes me scared that they walk around with guns.”
“More
than anything, I wish they studied. If things were peaceful, then they could
study and make something of themselves,” said Luis’ mother, Dominga, who asked
to withhold her last name to protect her son. She runs the house and takes care
of the family cows. “Of course, it makes me scared that they walk around with
guns. But it’s so they can defend themselves.”
The escalation in
violence comes amid a larger security crisis in Mexico, with 2019 registering
the highest number of murders on record. López Obrador has rejected a strategy
of head-on confrontation with the cartels, saying it leads to more violence.
In Guerrero, Los
Ardillos cartel, or “The Squirrels,” is sowing terror.
Long associated
with poppy production and heroin distribution, it has used kidnappings,
murders, and extortion to vanquish critics and exert control over the region.
In 2015, hundreds of armed men reportedly from Los Ardillos entered the city of
Chilapa searching for members of a rival cartel. At least 15 people
disappeared.
The
cartel is run by three brothers; a fourth brother is a former politician who
served as president of the Congress in Guerrero.
Luis Hernández
Navarro, a Mexican journalist who has studied the region, said the cartel is
seeking to assert absolute control, and that indigenous communities are some of
the last holdouts. “They have done everything possible to kick the indigenous
communities out of their territories,” he said. “The idea is to have a free
corridor to transport drugs.”
In
January 2019, Los Ardillos tried to enter one of the 16 villages protected by
the militia. A firefight ensued, and at least 10 cartel members died, according
to community members and press accounts. Soon after, indigenous women from the
hamlet began training with guns so they could also fight in case they were
attacked again.
Los Ardillos have
made it clear they will go after anyone associated with the civilian militia,
and this year they appeared to make good on that promise.
In January, 10
musicians from an indigenous village were ambushed as they returned home from
playing a concert. The bodies of the men, between the ages of 15 and 42, were
found in two vans, their bodies burned beyond recognition.
Government
officials blamed Los Ardillos for the attack and described it as “an act of
vengeance,” referencing the shoot-out a year earlier.
The murders
prompted the militia to hold a march, where they paraded the boys with
guns before local news outlets. It was an escalation of a strategy they had
utilized months earlier when they uploaded
videos to social media of children training with sticks.
The Mexican news giant Televisa broadcast images from the march, and the story
landed on the front pages of newspapers around the country.
Government
officials and human rights groups condemned the group, accusing it of
exploitation.
“It doesn’t matter
if the recruiting is being done by criminal groups, the military, or indigenous
self-defense groups; it’s a crime,” said Juan Martín Pérez García, executive
director of REDIM, a collective of children’s advocacy groups in Mexico.
The display of armed children is disputed
even within the militia, with accusations of rogue actors using
the kids as propaganda.
But
the strategy has spurred action. The government deployed military forces to
help shore up security, and the governor
met with community leaders to discuss their demands.
Coffins of the 18 Musicians murdered |
“Now that we show
off the children, the governor is coming to our community and meeting with us.
But if we hadn’t done that, the governor would never have come,” said Sánchez
Luna, the militia’s founder.
Tensions between
the indigenous communities and the government extend back to the 1990s, said
Abel Barrera Hernández, a Mexican anthropologist and director of the Center for
Human Rights of the Mountain of Tlachinollan in Guerrero. The communities
refused to participate in a nationwide land reform program, because they viewed
land as community-owned instead of private property.
That fueled
agrarian conflicts and long-standing feuds that have contributed to the violence
today. Barrera said the government ignored the conflict and left the indigenous
communities to fend for themselves.
“No one takes notice when the children are illiterate and
malnourished. No one cares until they see children with guns.”
“No one takes
notice when the children are illiterate and malnourished. No
one
cares until they see children with guns,” he said. “This is a strategy, a cry
of despair before the inaction, indolence, and racist attitudes of the
government authorities. The innocence has been snatched from these children and
they have to wake up in this nightmare.”
The line between
innocence and adulthood is increasingly blurred. Between exercises with the
guns, the boys hang around the basketball court and play with yoyos, killing
time before they go to the fields to take care of their goats and cows. The
15-year-old boys have started going on night patrols with the other men in the
community.
Luis has yet to
shoot a gun at a person, and he said if his village is attacked, he plans to
stay back at home to defend his mom and sister. “They taught me that weapons
aren’t to be used to rob people. It’s only to protect ourselves if the criminal
group shows up.”
He said he misses
going to school, especially his math classes. He was learning long division. He
wanted to become a teacher or a doctor — he’s not sure which, perhaps both.
Those dreams are gone. “If it weren’t for the crime, I would continue,” he
said.
Luis rarely leaves
his house without his gun, wary of being kidnapped or killed at any second. “I
like to take care of my goats. And to play basketball,” he said. “I still feel
like a kid, even though I’m carrying a weapon.”
(Jika Gonzalez/VICE News)
That's good de kids defending the town's, since Obradors government and police don't protect thier citizens.
ReplyDeleteAgree
DeleteI believe there is nothing wrong with this they are in a position where they have to defend there life and there people anyway they can until things change, there is a slim better chance of survival when you are trained to defend yourself
ReplyDeleteGive them AR15 NATO ROUNDS. f--k Mexico gun control.
ReplyDeleteIf it wasn't against the law I, 'd give every family a gun in Mexico. That's Mexico is so F--ked. Pinche control
ReplyDelete1:05 it was against the law to issue weapons to the North American colony's revolutionaries that formed the US, but weapons dealers who have been selling weapons to every side of every armed conflict even before then, and including today's revolutionaries, criminals, drug traffickers including mexican cartels only care about making coin, BIG COIN or getting drug money to launder
Delete756 this happening in Mexico, not the USA.
Delete9:51 drugs flow through Mexico to the USA, weapons and funds for more criminals and drug trafficking kers flow from the US to Mexico and SouthAmerica...drugs marketed on the US make the big profit for americans on the US and their banks have been fined billions of dollars for money laundering, no mexican banks have been heavily fined, those are FACTS.
DeleteIt’s insane to have kids fight, but if they wanted the media attention to shame AMLO’s government, it’s working. People are taking notice of how fucked up the situation is. God protect these children from evil.
ReplyDeleteShame on you, AMLO. Shame on Mexicans. You should be plotting against the narcos. Plotting their death. Luring them into ambushes. Lying in wait, bombing their cars, stealing their guns and ammunition, in short, putting the fear of God in their hearts.
ReplyDeleteAlMO does not care a rats azz, as long as thick envelopes with money keep coming in, he will look the other way.
Delete6:42 I wonder what do you have to say to local state governor in charge of public security in the state of Guerrero, PRD ASTUDILLO installed by EPN and his friend angel aguirre rivero PRD, former PRIISTA after they disappeared 43 Ayotzinapos...
Delete--If there is still crime in Guerrero it is because of them, but in 1840s there was an offer to the US president to take over all of Mexico and not just the 60% already taken; US president james Polk refused the offer he could not refuse because "the US would have to kill the about 6 million indians living in southern mexico, he would not receive 6 million square wheels and the race would be corrupted by the virus of spanish corruption..." wrote he to sec of state, James Buchanan, general Zachary Taylor refused the presidency of Mexico because he wanted to be US president...AMLO WAS NOT BORN YET, who would you blame for the old treachery?
El Brindis del Desierto- La Traicion de los hijos de mexico/ Yolo Camotes
See it on You Tube with bibliography and references.
Arming themselves against a powerless government from extinction is not wrong. Rather, necessary.
ReplyDeleteThis war on drugs has created facets of disappointment in all sectors of society. Factual evidence clearly states one's outcome if allowed.
This is happening in Mexico, not in the US. I miss the guy that compares things to the US.
ReplyDeleteMexican children defending themselves from other Mexicans or their own Mexican Government?
ReplyDeleteSo, this is America’s fault?
Again?
Still?
Somehow?
What the fuck do you want from us?
They have no other choice
ReplyDeleteNow are these familys growing poppy
Or are they just happen to live on the route thru their village
This is the result of lack of care protection for these people by the Mexican Gov.
These kids have more heart then 75% of all Mexicans
It is a Shame They are forced to do this
But its a nessacery Evil I think all Mexicans should look at this and say
Hey there is a million of us against a few thousand of them
Wheres the Magnificent 7 when we need them !
Fight for your rights
As long as they are not in the drug bussines also
Shame on you Mr President
Give these kids huggs and Protection
So they can go to school and one day Rise Up to be Future President of Mexico to protect its people from bad banditos
Sorry but your President is Useless
4:42 well, on the US, minor aged children use weapons all the time, some have pilot licenses to fly to kill themselves, gangbangers kill each other and others, but weapons on these mexican kids for self defense are OK in my book, blame the governor in THE STATE not AMLO on Mexico City...
ReplyDeleteThis is nothing new these people have always been treated different from all Mexicans and it’s a shame because were all the same they have grown poppy cause it was the only resource they had to get money but know it’s not even worth it cause the price of goma is so cheap and they have to defend themselves from the government other pueblos and cartel with ther shotguns and small caliber 22rifles at times cause they don’t all have AR’s&AK’s and the government still take away the guns from them it’s sucks then they wonder why Mexico is the way it is cause government just takes and don’t help so pretty much on your own to feed and defend yourself and family and with no real resources they have to turn to criminal activity to get money for weapons and then to pay officials to protect themselves cause with money comes power and problems so it starts of as a necessary way to survive and they just lose control
ReplyDelete804 is here the man that compares Mexico to the US welcome.
ReplyDelete@ 4:42
ReplyDeleteAs if America didn't have an issue with gun violence among children. Gang infested cities are under siege by shootings & killings daily.
Drugs & Guns are easily accessible in the Good Ole USA.
Thanks to contributing authors;
Pharmaceutical companies
NRA'S lobbyists & politicians
Weak Gun Laws & regulations
DTO'S
Ect.
Truth
Oh ok So they do grow poppy
ReplyDeleteSee now this changes things (kinda)
I dont know enough about that
I thought these children were just plain farmers and cartels were useing their town as a smugglers route
So its their own product they are protecting ???
Why are they poor ? Shit orange growers are richer
How can a poppy farmer be poor
Yes yes I understand the prosess to make heroin costs money etc
But even then These farmers should be kings of the hill ?
I dont condon it but dont understand how they dont have their own big armys
It said the woman sellinv beans at market it did not say they grew Poppy
I am confused and Not even blond
Colombians continue to grow the cocoa plant despite government incentives for alternate cultivation. Yet, the cocoa plant is more profitable for those who just cultivate and not process.
DeleteEconomic resources often dictate one's living. Especially when government resources are limited or non-existent.
E42
6:08 The farmers who grow whatever shit they grow never get well paid, it is like the diamond miners who get exploited in Africa by Jared Kushner's associates, they do not even make money for shoes, which should be nobody's concern, Africans have never worn shoes even to outrun the lions chasing them all the time.
DeleteMiddlemen make some more money,
but the big bucks are got by wholesalers of finished product delivered by their specially trained logistics coordinators like El Chapo, whose Billions of dollars can't be found anywhere in this world.
--Do not forget to check UN data about the 9 000 % increase in poppy production in Afghanistan after they got their own US financed war on the Taliban, it accounts for 90% of the heroin produced in the world, and I don't think the proceeds get spent in weapons for the Taliban or AlQaeda, not on shoes either...
--What goes on in Guerrero is a depopulation program, the score says who lives or dies but not why, one of the reasons is La Parota and its fans...