Mexico drug gangs in new battle for local addicts

CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico, (Reuters) – Mexico’s violent  drug gangs are fighting over home-grown addicts in the dingy  back streets of northern border cities, creating new turf wars  that will further stretch the country’s security forces. Hooded gunmen have stormed at least seven rehabilitation  clinics in Ciudad Juarez on the U.S. border since early last  year in deadly attacks that target rival drug dealers. Two  strikes last month killed 28 people. 

Hitmen have burst into bars and house parties in Tijuana to  murder dealers, dragged others to car junk yards to torture and  kill them and dumped bodies of scrawny teenage addicts in piles  outside slums notorious for drug dealing.  

The army, border officials and social workers say top drug  lord Joaquin “Shorty” Guzman has diversified from his battle  for smuggling routes into the United States to seek control of  a growing pool of Mexican addicts along the border. This is a new dynamic in the cartel war,” said a senior  Mexican police chief on the border who declined to be named  because of the sensitivity of the issue.  

“Guzman is trying to dominate the local market but other  cells also want control, so the conflict is intensifying.”  

As social norms have loosened, a growing middle class has  become more prosperous and tighter border controls make moving  drugs into the United States more difficult, leading gangs have  sought to increase consumption in Mexico.   Cartels prey on the huge transitory work force in factories  on the Mexican side of the border, eager to create addicts of  the 56,500 people who lost their factory jobs in Ciudad Juarez  over the past two years as recession hit the economy. From Tijuana to Reynosa on the Texan border, Guzman’s  hitmen are trying to eliminate rival small-time smugglers and  dealers — mostly jobless addicts and high school drop-outs —  in a new test for President Felipe Calderon’s efforts to crush  the cartels.  

Just yards from the U.S. border in Ciudad Juarez, a group  of gunmen burst into a rehab clinic last month, lined up 17  patients and murdered them. Blood flowed out onto the  sidewalk.  

“We never received any threats, they just came in and  started shooting,” said a survivor of the clinic attack who  declined to give his name for fear of reprisals. “We never hid  anyone from any gang, we didn’t have anything to hide.”