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Police chief of Tijuana replaced by an Army Officer
Army in government positions? Extreme decisions for extreme situations.UPDATE
The Pacific border town of Tijuana counted its bloodiest 48 hours to date this week, with 36 bodies found over two days. Twelve had been executed together, and were left decapitated and mutilated in a car park.
The sudden escalation led to the dismissal of police chief Alberto Capella Ibarra, who was interviewed by The Observer last month and warned: 'This war will continue so long as drugs are illegal and command high prices in the United States. Legalise the drugs, then the Americans can get high and we can live in peace.' The new police chief is Lieutenant-Colonel Julian Leyzaola, recently brought in to command the city's special forces. Mexico's state and municipal police have been heavily infiltrated by the cartels and the government has promised to bring them under its control.
Calderón's government is the first in Mexico seriously to confront the cartels, and the resultant war is in part a response.
Leyzaola told The Observer that the level of violence was the result of 'social terrorism' by the narcos. 'All I can do is to increase a police profile in the community to avert the kind of social psychosis that the narcos want to generate,' he said. 'I pledge physical presence to reassure people, and intelligence and manpower to fight the criminals themselves.'
The police chief in the Mexican border city of Tijuana has been removed from his post following a weekend in which 37 people were killed.
State authorities say Jesus Capella, who had received numerous threats, will be replaced by an army officer.
Mexico's border with the US is facing spiraling drug violence, and several police chiefs have either been murdered or arrested on corruption charges.
Three months of violence in Tijuana have claimed more than 300 lives.
Even by the current violent standards of the city, last weekend was particularly gruesome.
Of the 37 people killed, nine men - including three police officers - were found decapitated.
Four children also died, apparently caught in the crossfire.
Tras una nueva ola de violencia en Tijuana, destituyen a Jesús Alberto Capella como jefe de la Policía; en su lugar queda el teniente coronel Julián Leyzaola Pérez
Crowd Power
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patgarcia
La Paz, Mexico
Recommendations (11)
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Rhonda J Mangus
North Tonawanda, New York, United States -
Paschen
Narita, Chiba, Japan 
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Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (9)
at 05:42 on December 2nd, 2008
That sounds extreme, yet it is an extreme situation as well. Rhonda just put up a post on the same issue as well.
Thank you for posting.
at 06:00 on December 2nd, 2008
Thank you for this story, pat. I posted related story earlier: Tijuana's Police Chief Fired After Wave of Violence.
at 06:03 on December 2nd, 2008
Thank you, Rhonda! Capella is being replaced by someone with a long record of experience/
at 06:04 on December 2nd, 2008
Thanks Pashen.
at 06:22 on December 2nd, 2008
You are very welcome, pat. Yes, Capella was replaced by his second-in-command, army Commander Julian Leyzaola. I just don't understand why no one seems to be able to get this matter under control; 20,000 troops have been sent to the streets since 2006. It would appear to me that the drug-cartels are much stronger than the military???
at 06:44 on December 2nd, 2008
They have displayed strength, they also have ex-military on their payroll.
at 15:37 on December 2nd, 2008
pat, I'm sure it goes beyond displayed strength and ex-military on their payroll. Where does the Merida Initiative fit in all of this?
at 16:24 on December 2nd, 2008
I sure hope it is not deviating to help organized crime!
at 01:13 on December 3rd, 2008
My guess is that it is deviating to help organized crime. Drugs are big business throughout the world -- and apparently there is more money in keeping drug use illegal, rather than to legalize it.