August 3, 2007:
Last
March, Mexican police found over $200
million in cash in a mansion. The rumor mill continues to claim that the
cash will be stolen by the police, or government, or - name it. There has been
another arrest in the case and a new accounting. First of all, all $207 million
in cash remains in a bank and accounted for. Second, the owner of the mansion
was identified as Zhenli Ye Gon. Mr. Zhenli "fled for the border" after the
raid on his mansion. He went to the US and holed up in a suburb of Washington,
DC. Last week a US grand jury indicted Zhenli for conspiring to produced
methamphetamine to be sold in the US. It's not clear whether he will be tried
in the US or Mexico, or in both nations.
July 30. 2007: The Mexican
government was surprised and then embarrassed, by the July 12 attacks by the
EPR on pipeline and petroleum facilities in Mexico. Mexico's Interior Ministry and it National
Security and Investigation Center (CISEN) had apparently lost track of the
Popular Revolutionary Army (EPR), which launched the attacks. The EPR has
launched attacks in the middle of President Calderon's new "war on drugs." It
may not be a coincidence. The fear is that the EPR has been bought off by drug
cartels. This has happened before, with Colombia and Peru as recent examples
where former leftist guerrilla organizations began working for drug lords.
July 29, 2007: The EPR claimed
that it attacked a government confinement facility in Chiapas state. The rebel
statement also demanded the release of two members who are being held by the
police.
July 28, 2007: It's estimated that at least 1000 businesses and
manufacturing sites in central Mexico had to curtail operations in the week
after the EPR attack on a PEMEX pipelines. The businesses had to reduce
operations due to fuel shortages. In total the businesses lost an estimated
five to ten million dollars a day This means the EPR's attack had very real
economic consequences, which was no doubt one of the rebels' goals. The EPR
claimed to have attacked three pipelines and a switching station in Queretaro
and Guanajuato states.
July 21, 2007: The EPR may be
but one face in a new surge of leftist political violence. Mexican intelligence
has identified four other left-wing "splinter groups": the Popular
Revolutionary Democratic Party (PDPR); Revolutionary Army of the Insurgent
People (ERPI); Revolutionary Armed Forces of the People (FARP); and Villista
Revolutionary Army of the People (EVRP). The "Villistas" pay homage to Mexican
revolutionary warlord Pancho Villa. Like the EPR, all four groups have
leadership cadres that either trained with or were influenced by the
Clandestine Revolutionary Workers Party (PROCUP). PROCUP was a 1960s-era
"Marxist" organization.
July 15, 2007: In the wake of
the July 12 bombings of PEMEX facilities, the Mexican government has sent 5000
soldiers to guard "strategic sites" in Mexico. The sites include dams and
refineries as well as other petroleum industry infrastructure. The soldiers are
drawn from The Corps of Federal Support Forces, a Mexican Army command created
in May 2007 and tasked with fighting the on-going war against drug cartels.