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Australian drug users fuelling cartels’ political violence ahead of Mexico elections

Australian drug users addicted to cocaine are fuelling a wave of violence across the world, and activists have demanded international action over the deaths.

Australian drug users fuelling wave of Mexico killings

Australian drug users are fuelling a wave of political violence in Mexico, where 22 candidates have been murdered ahead of national elections on June 2.

Activists have demanded an international reaction to the deaths – driven largely by cartels running the country’s spiralling drug trade –to put pressure on the Mexican government.

Gisela Gaytan was the latest candidate to be executed, gunned down in a hail of bullets on her first day of campaigning this month.

The 38-year-old was the only female candidate wanting to be mayor of Celaya – a three-hour drive from Mexico City – but one cartels felt they could not control.

The murders have had a chilling effect on the elections, with dozens of candidates withdrawing because of fears for the safety of their families.

Mayoral candidate Gisela Gaytan (right) was murdered on April 1, her first day of campaigning for the Mexican election. Picture: Instagram
Mayoral candidate Gisela Gaytan (right) was murdered on April 1, her first day of campaigning for the Mexican election. Picture: Instagram

“No official candidate is even talking about this, there is 95 per cent immunity in Mexico,” human rights activist Michael Chamberlin said in an interview from Mexico City.

“We need an international criminal court to look into the disappearances.

“There has to be some international reaction because it’s not happening in Mexico, the criminal groups have too much power.”

Mr Chamberlin, who lives in Mexico City, is a senior fellow at the Centre for International Policy and president of Solidaria Consultora.

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He said the political murders were part of a wider issue in Mexico, where more than one person is murdered every hour across the country.

Ruthless cartels hire “cooks” to dismember bodies and burn them in fields because there are so many murders there.

Many are linked to drug cartels fighting over control over the lucrative drug market, with Mexico overtaking Asia as the major source of ice shipments into Australia

Mexico's special operations forces training to raid and secure clandestine ice labs, gathering evidence for criminal charges. Mexico has overtaken Asia as the major source of ice shipments into Australia. Picture: Jason Edwards
Mexico's special operations forces training to raid and secure clandestine ice labs, gathering evidence for criminal charges. Mexico has overtaken Asia as the major source of ice shipments into Australia. Picture: Jason Edwards

There were 23.6 tonnes of Mexican meth seized in Australia, or destined for our shores, in the 2023 financial year.

The Australian Federal Police estimates 70 per cent of the ice taken on Australian streets now comes from Mexico.

Australian criminals can import Mexican ice for $1000 a kilo, compared with paying between $3000 and $5000 for the same drugs produced in Asia’s Golden Triangle.

The Sinaloa cartel has been the dominant cartel, but has been fighting for territory with the CJNG cartel.

The battles increased after the Mexican government started a war on the cartels in 2006, which led to a splintering of the market.

The Gulf Cartel, Los Zetas, and Tijuana cartels were among those which had been weakened by the bloody battles.

More than 400,000 people have been murdered since 2006, while 111,896 people were reported missing, presumed dead, according to a United Nations statement in October 2023.

Human rights advocate Michael Chamberlin. Picture: Supplied
Human rights advocate Michael Chamberlin. Picture: Supplied

“The bodies are dismembered and they burn the parts. You can find fields where there are small pieces of bones that are human remains,” Mr Chamberlin said.

“People are somehow trained to do that. They are called the cooks, they are in charge of dismembering and burning the bodies.

“We have several groups of victims’ families, the mothers of those who have disappeared who are looking for their loved ones. They are called seekers, they get together and go looking in fields.”

Mexicans will elect a new president in June, along with 20,000 other officials in the largest poll ever undertaken in the North American country.

The Institutional Revolutionary Party had a stranglehold on Mexican politics for 71 years, ruling from 1929 to 2000.

The National Action Party took power for 12 years, before the traditional party won the election again.

The Morena political party, which was set up by Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, won the 2018 election.

When asked about the violence against political candidates, Lopez Obrador, known as AMLO, told 60 Minutes in the United States: “Generally, they all participate. There are many candidates from all the parties.”

However, he told the Washington Post that drug cartels had been influencing elections.

“They make an agreement and say, ‘this person is going to be mayor; we don’t want anyone else to register to run,’ and anybody who does, well, they know what to expect,” AMLO was reported to have said.

Political candidates can get police protection in Mexico, but must prove they have received threats before they receive security details.

Ms Gaytan had applied for armed security but it was not processed before her murder on April 1.

“Today, I want to write a new chapter for Celaya with you,” Ms Gaytan posted on Instagram on the day she was killed.

“Our care deserves to shine once again, but to achieve it we must act with determination and courage.”

Originally published as Australian drug users fuelling cartels’ political violence ahead of Mexico elections

Original URL: https://www.themercury.com.au/news/world/australian-drug-users-fuelling-cartels-political-violence-ahead-of-mexico-elections/news-story/b0d5b7438b2ccc73eec0d93e388ca461