IGUALA, Mexico (AP) — The killer
says he "disappeared" a man for the first time at age 20. Nine years
later, he says, he has eliminated 30 people — maybe three in error.
He sometimes
feels sorry about the work he does but has no regrets, he says, because
he is providing a kind of public service, defending his community from
outsiders. Things would be much worse if rivals took over.
"A
lot of times your neighborhood, your town, your city is being invaded
by people who you think are going to hurt your family, your society," he
says. "Well, then you have to act, because the government isn't going
to come help you."
He
operates along the Costa Grande of Guerrero, the southwestern state that
is home to glitzy Acapulco as well as to rich farmland used to
cultivate heroin poppies and marijuana. Large swaths of the state are
controlled or contested by violent drug cartels that traffic in opium
paste for the U.S. market, and more than 1,000 people have been reported
missing in Guerrero since 2007— far fewer than the actual number
believed to have disappeared in the state.
The
plight of the missing and their families burst into public awareness
last year when 43 rural college students were detained by police and
disappeared from the Guerrero city of Iguala, setting off national
protests. Then, suddenly, hundreds more families from the area came
forward to report their kidnap victims, known now as "the other
disappeared." They told stories of children and spouses abducted from
home at gunpoint, or who left the house one day and simply vanished. Read full news..
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