How Mexico’s cartel crackdown smashed its iron industry
A government offensive against
the Knights Templar cartel has had the side effect of leaving thousands of
miners out of work.
By Ioan Grillo
AGUILILLA, Mexico— Iron ore lies abandoned in
titanic piles like a gray lunar landscape amid these green hills.
Government security forces descended on an open-pit mine here in
July to shut it down and confiscate hundreds of tons of raw metal.
The reason? The mine was operated by the bloodthirsty Knights
Templar cartel, which has diversified from cooking crystal meth to a range of
rackets.
It was not the only narco mine. Since soldiers and marines
flooded Michoacán in January to fight the Knights Templar, they have helped
shutter more than 100 pits of iron, copper and other metals. In total, a
whopping 700,000 tons of minerals have been confiscated and are piled up in
mounds like this.
The government of President Enrique Peña Nieto has touted the
seizures as proof it is fighting organized crime.
But the crackdown has had an unwanted side effect. More than
6,000 direct jobs have been lost from the closures, according to the local
miners union, which has organized marches to try to get pits open again.
One such mine worker, Rolando Chavarria, squats on the Aguililla
site under a tarp, cooking beans and tortillas. He normally uses his truck to
carry the ore down the hill but is now unemployed and scraping to get by.
“It is good the government fights crime but what about us?”
Chavarria asked over his boiling pots. “We need some income. I am going to
starve to death if they don’t get this mine open again soon.”
The glimmering piles of metallic rock and hungry miners
illustrate President Peña Nieto’s challenge in fighting cartels that have
diversified into a broad portfolio of criminal activities.
A decade ago, most Mexican drug traffickers used to simply
traffic drugs.
Now cartels engage in crimes including human smuggling, sex
trafficking, product piracy, oil theft, kidnapping, extortion and gun running
as well moving tons of narcotics to American users.
The billions of dollars in these businesses fund violence that
has claimed more than 70,000 lives since 2006.
Many mines are in sparsely policed mountains inside traditional
drug-producing areas like Michoacan, so they were easy prey for cartels.
Gangsters in Michoacan began by simply shaking down mines for
extortion payments. One businessman who owns an iron pit in the state (as well
as building sites in Mexico City) says cartel emissaries began to charge him a
quota back in 2009.
“How could I refuse to pay? I didn’t want me or my employees to
end up dead,” the owner said. “It became an extra cost that I had to take into
account to run the business.”
However, as the Knights Templar saw the bubbling profits
involved they started cutting out the middlemen and forced people to sell them
— or give them — the mines.
The cartel also began excavating in pits without permits and
ignoring environmental regulations.
While illegal and polluting, the cartel helped boost iron production
at a time when Chinese industry has created a huge demand. Michoacán boasts the
nation’s biggest Pacific port, Lazaro Cardenas, where container ships sail
straight to Shanghai.
In the first six months of 2013, a
record 5.5 million metric tons of minerals sailed from the port
to China.
The Knights also shook down Michoacán’s
farmers, including its vast avocado industry, a big source of guacamole for
hungry Americans.
Many angry farmers
were so furious about paying the gangsters they supported a vigilante movement
to fight the Knights Templar. The Peña Nieto government eventually allied with
these vigilantes and in May allowed many to be deputized into a new Rural State
Force.
The combined forces of vigilantes, soldiers and police hammered
the Knights Templar and their bloody grip on the state this year.
But the mining industry has also been shattered. In the first
half of this year, the amount of ore heading from Lazaro Cardenas to China
hurtled down to 1.2 million metric tons.
In Aguililla alone, this has put a total of 500 people out of
work in a mountain community with few sources of income, says Adalberto
Fructuoso Comparan, a former mayor who joined the vigilantes and is now local
head of the Rural Force.
“It doesn’t just make the miners unemployed but impacts the
whole economy,” Comparan said. “There are people who transport the minerals,
people who sell food to the miners, companies that provide material for the
mine.”
The government promised to reactivate the industry following the
closures.
“We have gotten past the security crisis. Now we are thinking of
the problems of lack of opportunities,” Interior Secretary Jose Miguel Osorio
Chong said in Lazaro Cardenas in July. “For this we offer the support of the
government to Michoacán.”
However, moves to restart the mining industry are slow. In mines
that have operated illegally, entirely new regulatory processes need to begin.
Only two of the 100 shuttered pits have so far reopened,
according the union.
It is also unclear what the government will do with all of the
properties — and hundreds of thousands of tons of iron.
Mexican police normally auction off seized narco assets, from
small planes to luxury cars. But that could be more difficult with mountains of
iron ore scattered over the highlands.
Residents close to the closed pits say the lack of work has led
to more common crimes, such as mugging and burglary.
“The government needs to move faster to get pits open or there
could be consequences,” Comparan said in Aguililla. “The people in these
communities need jobs urgently. It is the lack of opportunities that makes
people turn to organized crime in the first place.”
Copyright @ 2014 Global Post
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