Mexican Cartels adopt Colombian Narcoterrorism
The drug cartels in Mexico have adopted the strategy of the Colombian narco kingpin Pablo Escobar. Realistically, they could even surpass it and permeate more virulently in the centers of power, said the journalist and director of the magazine Emeequis, Ignacio Rodriguez Reyna.

There may be more attacks and killings Escobar style, (a continuous of) car bombings, kidnapping and murder of public figures (who oppose the interests of the underworld). Before they "respected" the civilians, but obviously that is behind us. And just when we think things are going to stop, our capacity for shock and awe will be forced to increase. "
The car-bomb attacks in Colombia have killed many people, and such events are continuously raising the statistics of victims in the country. For that reason, experts have warned that the outlook in Mexico might become bleak with Mexican narcos adopting South American drug lord strategies . The alert escalated, after the car bombing attack in Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua, despite the refusal of the Federal Government.
If the cartel underworld accumulates a bit more power, they will raise the level of violence," said Ignacio Rodriguez Reyna and insisted that the red light is on in Mexico, the failed security strategy of the Government of Felipe Calderón, has far from extinguished the fire, they have multiplied; the attacks they are beginning to see in the nation, seem to follow the footsteps of Colombia.

Pablo Escobar was accused of participating in the DAS Building bombing, which killed around a hundred people and injured close to a thousand. In addition he was found responsible for paying ETA terrorists to plant the bomb that blew up an Avianca jet that killed 107 people.

Violence in Mexico, paradoxically, has exploded with the war against organized crime undertaken by the Federal Government. This, said Ignacio Rodríguez, already affecting civil society, permeates the large circles of power.
Reyna Rodriguez emphasized that the scenario seems to indicate that more violence is in store for the entire country and that is a lie that are states which will be safe from it.
Mexico's violence, in respect to organized crime, began with the massacre between leaders of criminal groups, but it has gradually spread affecting civil society. Now they have started to see narco-terrorists attacks with car bombs in the border city Juarez, Chihuahua and another in Victoria, Tamaulipas. This has set off a warning about what could come if the Mexican underworld mimics the steps of the historical drug lords, said Rodriguez Reyna.
Additionally, the Mexican journalist warned that organized crime in Mexico has permeated the centers of power, and it would not be surprising to see future attacks against government officials, once again while comparing the leaders of organized crime in Mexico with the Colombian kingpin.
Pablo Escobar (Medellin cartel leader and chief of the Colombian mafia) was responsible for charges as serious as the asassinations of the director of El Espectador, Guillermo Cano, the Justice Minister Rodrigo Lara Bonilla in 1984, the Liberal Party Leader and Colombian presidential candidate, Luis Carlos Galan in 1989, and the kidnapping of eight journalists, one of whom died. "The cocaine czar" had also be cited as being responsible for the assassination of presidential candidates Carlos Pizarro Leongómez, leader of the M-19, and Bernardo Jaramillo Ossa, leader of the Patriotic Union. As well as the murder of Marina Montoya, sister of the residential secretary during the administration of Virgilio Barco, in January 1991.





