Coming to a town near YOU: Mexican 'express kidnappings'



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Topic: Politics > Politics-USA
User: "George Washington Admirer"
Date: 31 Aug 2006 11:49:17 PM
Object: Coming to a town near YOU: Mexican 'express kidnappings'
Doing the kidnappings Americans won't do! ...
----------------------------------------------------
Correspondent Greg Brosnan took up an assignment in Mexico City last
year to cover the Mexican economy. In the following story he recounts
how he was held up and robbed in an "express kidnapping."
Mexico City style applied economics 101
By: Greg Brosnan
Thu Aug 31, 2006
[(Pic)- A taxi travels in downtown Mexico City, August 30, 2006. Express
kidnappings have become so common in Mexico that taking a street taxi
-- which thieves often use to capture their victims -- is akin to
playing Russian roulette. REUTERS/Tomas Bravo]
MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - "I'm really sorry. This is my job," the man
said, wiping his fingerprints from my debit card.
He slipped it back to me under a table in a crowded downtown restaurant
where a Mexican friend and I had been held hostage for a half an hour
that felt like two days.
An accomplice, who had guarded us while his partner emptied nearly
$1,000 from a nearby cash dispenser using the PIN number I had given
him, eyed the door.
Then they calmly walked out, warning us to order two more beers and
wait 10 minutes before leaving, saying many more of their gang would
follow us to make sure we did as we were told.
Two days after arriving from New York to take up my post as an
economics reporter in Mexico City, I had experienced one of the
nastiest and fastest-growing manifestations of Mexico's informal
economy - "express kidnapping".
I had never been mugged while reporting previously for Reuters in
Mexico and Guatemala, or even during a spell living in a Brazilian
shantytown.
In New York City, where my beat was the Latin American debt market,
three assailants had tried to rob me in my apartment building in a
still rough-at-the-edges neighborhood but they got cold feet when I
shouted for help.
More than a few expatriates working for any length of time in Latin
America have been mugged. I imagined my luck would run out on a dark
back street, not in broad daylight amid a throng of Saturday shoppers.
Express kidnappings have become so common in Mexico that taking a
street taxi -- which thieves often use to capture their victims -- is
akin to playing Russian roulette. Many end in violence and sometimes
death.
In a typical taxi-jacking story heard everywhere across this city, your
cab driver announces he has broken down and slows to a halt. Gunmen
force their way in, pistol whip you to the floor and demand your ATM
card and PIN.
Victims who struggle can get killed. Women have been raped. Kidnappers
often hold their prey until after midnight so as to extract the next
day's cash dispenser limit as well. If you survive you may be let out
beaten and penniless miles from home.
DARK THREATS
My kidnappers were professionals. We never saw a gun, just a bulge
clasped inside a jacket.
A man stopped us in the street to ask directions, drew us close and
whispered not to look around but that we were surrounded by gang
members with silencer-fitted pistols in league with the police.
A partner joined him and he told us to follow him as naturally as
possible into a side-street working-class restaurant.
According to the hostile environment training course I'd taken earlier
in the year, the optimum time to flee was right then, as our assailants
secured control.
We could have made a commotion or run. Maybe there were only two of
them and police were not really involved, but in a country where police
themselves often run kidnapping rings, we struck an unspoken agreement
not to risk it.
Families devoured stews and swigged beer and sodas around us in the
restaurant. Salsa blared as we played with the bland rice and soup we'd
been told to order.
As they took turns to watch us, they kept up a jovial banter peppered
with dark threats of dismemberment. I spotted a third man in the
doorway, one eye on us, another on the street.
As our assailants disappeared into the sunlit smog, we nervously
chinked our bottles, drank up and wandered dazed into the noisy
traffic. The parting words one of the kidnappers rang in my ears.
"Mexico is a great place. You should stay," he told me. "It just wasn't
your lucky day."
--
EMAIL THESE LINKS TO EVERYONE YOU KNOW:
http://www.predatoryaliens.com
http://www.immigrationshumancost.org
http://www.daylaborers.org
http://www.newnation.com/index2.html
"The Illegal-Alien Crime Wave" by Heather Mac Donald
http://www.city-journal.org/html/14_1_the_illegal_alien.html
http://idexer.com
www.AmericanPatrol.com
www.SaveOurState.org
www.escapingjustice.com
http://reportillegals.com/
www.deputydavidmarch.com
www.kriseggle.org
.


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