Mexicans hope drug lord’s arrest may turn tide

MEXICO CITY, (Reuters) – Mexico paraded one of its  most violent drug lords yesterday after a police raid that  President Felipe Calderon’s government hopes will mark a  breakthrough in its campaign against powerful cartels.

But the capture of Edgar “La Barbie” Valdez, a Texas-born  37-year-old, may do little to halt the flow of drugs into the  United States or staunch bloodshed in Mexico’s most violent  areas, most of them along the U.S. border.

In a sign of the widening violence, eight people were  killed in the Caribbean resort of Cancun early yesterday when  suspected drug hitmen threw Molotov cocktails into a bar on the  city’s outskirts, the local attorney general’s office said.

In Mexico City, masked police paraded a handcuffed Valdez  before reporters.

Wearing a green polo shirt, jeans and sneakers, Valdez,  nicknamed “La Barbie” for his fair complexion, grinned openly  as authorities discussed his capture near Mexico City on Monday  afternoon.

“He has been detained, and this operation closes a chapter  in drug trafficking in Mexico,” senior federal police official  Facundo Rosas told local broadcaster Televisa.

But the arrest is unlikely to have a direct impact on some  of the worst violence hurting Mexico’s image as it struggles  out of recession and seeks to hold on to tourist revenues.

Over 28,000 people have died since Calderon launched his  crackdown in late 2006, and the bloodshed shows no sign of  stopping as rival gangs battle for control of smuggling  routes.

Officials say Valdez was a leader of the Beltran Leyva  cartel based in central Mexico, trafficked a tonne of cocaine  each month and was responsible for “several dozen” murders.

He was known for the merciless beheadings of rivals,  torturing and mutilating victims, and for ordering the  slaughter of the family of a marine who took part in the  killing of his former boss Arturo Beltran Leyva in December.

But Valdez’s operations were small compared to Mexico’s top  gangs — the Sinaloa, Gulf and Juarez cartels — who smuggle  the majority of the 140 tonnes of cocaine the United Nations  estimates that Mexico exports to the United States every year. Neither is the arrest likely to end violence in border  areas like Ciudad Juarez, across from El Paso, Texas, or in  Mexico’s wealthy northern city of Monterrey, which is being  sucked into the drug war with spiraling violence this year.

“Ciudad Juarez and Monterrey were not La Barbie’s area of  influence, his capture won’t affect violence there,” said a  senior federal police official who declined to be named,  echoing another security official interviewed by Reuters.

Violence has begun to bleed beyond traffickers and security  forces as cartels target mayors and migrants traveling north.

Valdez’s arrest follows an operation in July that killed  Ignacio “Nacho” Coronel, No. 3 in the Sinaloa cartel.