
Cartel-plagued Mexican city pins hopes on Trump's anti-drug trafficking pressure
'Tired of being among the bullets'
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It started in September, more than a month after Ismael 'El Mayo' Zambada — the Sinaloa cartel's oldest and most astute leader — says he was kidnapped by one of the sons of former leader Joaquín 'El Chapo' Guzmán and taken to the U.S. where they were both arrested.
It unleashed a power struggle between both cartel factions and the unwritten agreement to not attack residents uninvolved in the drug trade was broken.
There were carjackings, kidnappings, innocents caught in crossfires and cartel roadblocks where gunmen would scan people's cell phones looking for any trace of contact with the other side. According to government data, there have been more than 900 killings since September.
A resident of Costa Rica, a small town south of the capital, traced the front line on the horizon: on one side the 'Chapos,' on the other the 'Mayos.' He, like most others, requested anonymity because of the danger.
An old man there said he saw gunmen dump two bodies in the street.
And sometimes people just disappear. Julio Héctor Carrillo, 34, never arrived home from visiting a relative in late January. According to his brother-in-law, Mario Beltrán, his only transgression was not respecting the locals' self-imposed curfew.
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His family didn't dare to put up signs for their search, instead sticking to social platforms. A search collective looking for the disappeared found a body that is undergoing DNA testing.
'At no other time in the last 30 to 40 years that we have crime stats, have we had so many families with disappeared (relatives),' said Miguel Calderón of the State Public Security Council, a citizen organization. Some are simply picked up, interrogated and released, but others end up on the wall of faces at Culiacan's cathedral.
'Truly, we're very tired, very tired of being among the bullets,' said a 38-year-old small business owner who has imposed his own family security protocol: no cycling for their 18-year-old son, who they take everywhere, including to visit his girlfriend, and track in real time through his cell phone.
Their 7-year-old daughter asks in the morning: ''Dad, am I going to be able to go to school today? Did you already check (Facebook)?''
'There are things you can't hide from children,' he said.
US: The solution or the problem?
How Mexican authorities are addressing the violence has changed notably in the past month and locals believe Trump is the reason.
When it started, Mexico was led by President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who minimized cartel violence and expressed no interest in going after cartel leaders. His close ally, Sinaloa Gov. Rubén Rocha did the same. Rocha's spokesman, Feliciano Castro, maintains that the U.S. set off the violence by arresting Zambada.
Things changed when Trump won the election. Shutting down illegal immigration and going after drug traffickers were among his campaign promises and he's threatened to impose 25% tariffs Tuesday. Mexico's new President Claudia Sheinbaum had already shown herself willing to take a more aggressive hand with the cartels, especially Sinaloa, whose main business is fentanyl.
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The number of security operations and arrests in Sinaloa have multiplied and now there is direct federal supervision of all security action.
'We have never seen such an overwhelming and daily operation against the cartels,' said Ismael Bojórquez, a veteran Sinaloa journalist covering organized crime, who was critical of López Obrador's hands-off approach.
In December, authorities seized more than a ton of fentanyl in Sinaloa compared to just 286 pounds in all of Mexico in the first six months of 2024.
In the last 10 days of February, authorities dismantled 113 synthetic drug labs, according to preliminary state data. Authorities have not clarified if they produced fentanyl or methamphetamine. It's unknown what, if any, role U.S. intelligence played.
In Culiacan, authorities took down more than 400 cartel surveillance cameras, double what authorities had.
The recent actions have weakened both cartel factions but the government can't let up if it really wants to decimate them, Bojórquez said.
'I never thought (Trump) would have so much power to do that … but I'm grateful,' said the owner of a beer store stopped at a police checkpoint.
A 55-year-old woman sitting on a bench watching a forensics team load a murder victim's body into a truck agreed. The day before, she had attended a Mass for her son-in-law who was killed five months earlier by a stray bullet while he was walking with his daughter a few blocks away.
'We leave home but we don't know if we'll return,' she said.
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Overcome fear, build peace
In the halls of Socrates Elementary school in downtown Culiacan, signs explain what to do in case of a shootout and children drill suddenly dropping to the ground when the alarm sounds.
Principal Victor Manuel Aispuro says he can't remember what it was like to have all of his nearly 400 students in school. Some 80 families fled the city and there were days when no more than 10 kids attended. He decides each day if there will be in-person classes.
The last time he closed was late last month when intense firefights and low-flying helicopters panicked residents. Two key cartel members were arrested.
In January, one of his students, a 9-year-old boy, was killed along with his 12-year-old brother and their father in a carjacking. Thousands of residents took to the streets in a rare public display of indignation.
At a workshop, a nongovernmental organization of ex-police led students through an exercise writing down what scares them. One listed spiders, gun shots and white trucks (the preferred cartel transportation). Another said he's afraid of being extorted or killed.
'The people are full of a sense of collective anguish, anxiety, social anger and that's different from other crises,' said Calderón, the coordinator of the citizen security group. He said he hopes it could dissolve the complicity of citizens, who for years saw the cartel as protectors, heroes or figures to emulate.
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