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Latin America
Related: About this forumEmptiness, Madness, and Fleeing in Central America
http://readersupportednews.org/opinion2/277-75/36773-emptiness-madness-and-fleeing-in-central-americaPrior to 1980, the rate of migration from Central America to the U.S. was very small. Then a series of internecine wars in the region exasperated by certain American politicians who tried to settle the Cold War in this small part of the world lead to the first massive wave of fleeing refugees. The Reagan administration sent millions in military aid to prop up deeply unpopular and repressive governments against left-wing insurgencies and in the process, devastated local economies and structures of society.
The levels of violence subsided in the 1990s with the onset of protracted peace processes, but a new threat engulfed the northern triangle of Central America as international drug cartels moved in to secure transshipment routes. Within a couple of decades, the region went from Cold War theater to a corridor for narco-trafficking, with 90 percent of cocaine consumed in the U.S. passing through the region.
The impact of the passage of illicit drugs about 850 tons a year, reports Martínez through these impoverished nations has been devastating. With massive profits to be made by independent contractors in securing the transport of the goods, local criminal groups, with the connivance of government and judicial elements, fight it out between themselves to secure the illicit routes.
It is all about profit, and the local narcos business in Central America is to push consignments north to the Mexican border, where Mexican cartels will take over. A kilo of cocaine in Nicaragua, Martínez reports, is worth $6,000; in El Salvador that same kilo is worth $11,000, in Guatemala is goes up to $12,000, and then in Chiapas (southern Mexico) its at $15,000 and by the time it gets to Matamoros (on the U.S.-Mexico border) it is already up to $20,000. At each hub along the route, big profits can be made, and thus, control of the territory is viciously contested. The victor is most likely the best-armed, most brutal competitor.
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Emptiness, Madness, and Fleeing in Central America (Original Post)
eridani
May 2016
OP
Judi Lynn
(160,662 posts)1. Best wishes to Óscar Martínez. Hope he will find a way to protect himself from the monsters
who don't want people outside their business knowing what terrors they are committing against good people.
Thanks for the information.
bemildred
(90,061 posts)2. Well theres some change for you, not much hope, but plenty of change. nt