.
“A Mexican soldier guards the entrance to the Pasta de Conchos coal mine (AFP/File)”
11/18/12, “Mexican druglords strike gold in coal,” AFP, Mexico
“They may be known for flashy cars and state of the art weaponry, but Mexican druglords have found an earthy new source of wealth: dirty old coal.
They
are mining it themselves in a coal-rich area along the US border or
buying it from small mine operators, then reselling it to a state-owned
company at fabulous margins that can see them make a profit 30 times greater than their initial investment.
Along the way, besides the earth’s black bounty, the druglords are seeking to reap credibility as legitimate business people.
First
word of the Zetas drug cartel’s presence in mining-heavy Coahuila state
came in October from a former governor, Humberto Moreira, who blamed
the notoriously violent group for his son’s death.
The Mexican Mining Association says Mexico produces 15mn tonnes of coal a year, worth $3.8bn. About 95% of it comes from Coahuila.
Reforma newspaper says the Zetas produce or buy 10,000 tonnes of coal a week. Selling it at their inflated prices, that means yearly revenue of $22mn to $25mn.
The Zetas were former Mexican military special forces operatives who worked for the Gulf Cartel.
But they broke away from that group to control lucrative drug
trafficking routes to the US and engage in other crimes such as
extortion, people trafficking and fuel theft.
“The Zetas are the first Mexican cartel to diversify from drugs into other areas,” said Tomas Borges, author of a book on the cartels.
Zetas
leader Heriberto Lazcano was shot and killed by authorities October 7
in the coal mining town of Progreso. His body was later stolen by armed
men.
Moreira says the drug lord had his own coal pit in the region.
But the Zetas presence is not new. Raul Vera, bishop of Coahuila’s capital Saltillo, said drug traffickers have been digging coal for years and doing it in areas where it is illegal.
“It is an open secret that drug traffickers are infiltrating the coal mines.
But since Moreira spoke out, we have seen police and military around
and we know they arrested several people,” a coal industry businessman
in Agujita said.
Highway 57 heading north to the US runs through a dusty black area where piles of coal from small, precariously operated mines
dot the landscape. Fatal accidents are common. Trucks loaded with coal
are stopped at checkpoints manned by soldiers looking for drug
traffickers and drug shipments.
Since the Zetas discovered coal, violence has been on the rise,
especially in a town of 150,000 called Piedras Negras, or black stones.
For drug cartels, diversification is almost a natural evolution, said Antonio Mazzitelli of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime.
In Colombia, for instance, traffickers infiltrated gold and coal mines and also dealt in oil. “Corruption is their main tool for doing business, and also violence, if necessary,” Mazzitelli said.
Legitimate businesses help cartels launder money and bring in extra
revenue, added Eduardo Salcedo, a Colombian who co-authored of a book on
how drug cartels have reshaped Colombia, Guatemala and MexiCo
Such business activities allow them not just to bring in more money “but above all gain social and political legitimacy”, Salcedo said.
Traffickers
want to be able to “legalise their leaders and activities and join the
formal economy, and be able to operate in society in a more relaxed
way”, he explained.
But that quiet end does not always involve peaceful means.
Traffickers sometimes kidnap, mug or even kill miners and their bosses, or force them into business-sharing agreements, said Salcedo.
In
Coahuila, some companies without mines or employees have contracts with
local coal industry promoter Prodemi, according to a researcher from a
local organisation founded by relatives of miners who died in a 2006
accident that claimed 65 lives.
“There
are mines that have a capacity for 30,000 tonnes but have contracts for
150,000. What they are selling is not what they are producing,” added
the researcher, who requested anonymity.
“They are buying it from a third party and that is where all these people come in, be they Zetas or not, legal or not, clandestine or not.” via Free Republic
“Suspected members of the Mexican drug cartel ‘Los Zetas’ from Guatemala and Mexico wait in court for a judgement (AFP/File)”
(Above) “Mexican miners go down in a shaft of a coal mine in Agujita, Coahuila State in Mexico (AFP/File)”
.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment