Perspectives

January 7, 2009
Pride turns to fear in Mexican city known for narco culture

Sinaloa is home to top drug leaders.

On Tuesday, armed gunmen attacked a Mexican television station reporting on drug-related violence, which is reaching unprecedented levels.

At least 5,300 drug-related slayings were reported in 2008, and violence may escalate this year.

Sinaloa, Mexico, is home to some of the country’s top drug leaders, and many local government and police officials are corrupt. In the past, the drug culture — and its money — have brought status to the state.

Clayton Worfolk and Jordan deBree with the Pulizter Center on Crisis Reporting are in Sinaloa and write about the changing views of the state’s residents in the “Untold Stories” blog.

Sinaloa: The birthplace of the drug cartel system

Even before the latest iteration of this drug war kicked off in December 2006 (when President Felipe Calderon launched his offensive against the cartels), Sinaloa state had the reputation of being a violent place. It was home to bandits and smugglers who took refuge in the Sierra Madre mountain range on the state’s eastern border.

One writer told us that men here used to settle disputes by locking one arm to each other and, with a knife held in their other hand, dueling to the death. Another man we interview attributes Sinaloans’ reputed propensity for violence to a diet of too much meat and seafood, too much testosterone.

It’s a reputation that many here have nurtured. For some, the fact that Sinaloa is the birthplace of the Mexican drug cartel system only adds to the state’s romantic allure. For decades, the narco-traffickers nurtured a sort of Robin Hood reputation around Mexico — violent and power-hungry, yes, but generous with their earnings. Culiacán — from its high-end car dealerships, to its lavish estates, ­to its well-dressed young men and women — was built and still runs on drug money that came down from the Sierras. If this isn’t a point of pride for all Sinaloans, it has certainly over the years enhanced the state’s cachet in the country and made clear that Sinaloans are to be respected — sentiments that all here seem to relish.

But as the Mexican drug war enters its third year, things may be changing. Residents’ feelings about the drug trade are a little more complicated now, to say the least. Pinned down by the government and undergoing seismic shifts in their leadership structure, the narcotraffickers have changed the rules. Wives, children and civilians are no longer off-limits, and people here know it.

To read more, see the original post.

Photo courtesy of Flickr user  patotenere under a Creative Commons license.

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