2019-11-04_Time

(Michael S) #1

21


in mexico’s big ciTies, dRug-caRTel
gunmen normally act like phantoms. They
hide in safe houses or amid communities,
suddenly striking with an assassination or a
gunfight, and then disappearing again.
But on Oct. 17 in the Sinaloan city of
Culiacan, the cartel gunmen were every-
where. Flights in and out of the airport
were canceled as they took control of
roads, blocked government buildings and
exchanged fire with security forces for hours,
leaving at least 14 people dead. Everyone else
had to act like ghosts, hiding behind locked
doors, not daring to step outside.
And in this unusual battle, the Sinaloa Car-
tel won. The uprising was in response to sol-
diers’ storming a house and arresting Ovidio
Guzmán López, the 28-year-old son of con-
victed kingpin Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán.
In February, the U.S. Justice Department an-
nounced it had indicted Guzmán López on
charges of trafficking cocaine, marijuana and
meth. But after hours of cartel chaos, Mexi-
co’s federal government capitulated, giving
soldiers the green light to release him.
“The city was under siege,” says Vladimir
Ramirez, a political scientist in Culiacan.
“People slept wherever they were. Businesses
are closed. Nobody wants to go out.”
This change is the result of a bloody trend
of cartels developing insurgent tactics over


BUSINESS


Not-so-secret ingredients
In a suit filed Oct. 17, Budweiser brewer Anheuser-Busch alleges that a former employee, now
working for longtime rival MillerCoors, obtained its secret beer recipes. (MillerCoors says it
“respects confidential information.”) Here, other recipe leaks. ÑCiara Nugent

CREAM SCHEME


In 2014, a federal court found
two men guilty of stealing
DuPont’s recipe for a chemical
used in paper, plastic—and
the filling in Oreo cookies. They
sold the info to a state-owned
Chinese firm.

SPICY SCOOP


While reporting a story on
Colonel Sanders in 2016, a
journalist snapped a picture of a
family scrapbook that appeared
to detail KFC’s secret spice mix
for its fried chicken. KFC denied
its authenticity.

KERNEL OF TRUTH


In April, the parent company of
Garrett Popcorn Shops sued
its former research director,
alleging she stole recipes. The
files were guarded by biometric
sensors and accessible by only
three people’s thumbprints.

many years. The cartels have armed up with
stolen military weapons and an endless
stream of rifles from the U.S.; from 2007 to
2018, more than 150,000 firearms seized in
Mexico were traced to U.S. gun shops and
factories. And they have learned to protect
their leaders with rings of gunmen who can
cause trouble to stop their capture.
“The Sinaloa Cartel demonstrated a tre-
mendous ability to mobilize rapidly and
take effective control of the city,” says Raul
Benitez, an expert on Latin America’s armed
conflicts. “They showed that in Sinaloa, they
are the ones who run things.”
In contrast, the Mexican military was in
shambles. Officials made contradictory state-
ments about why the soldiers had gone to ar-
rest Guzmán López without enough backup.
In many places in the city, the cartel gun-
men went unchallenged. There were reports
that the cartel had held various soldiers hos-
tage and threatened to kill them. “You can’t
fight fire with fire,” President Andrés Manuel
López Obrador said on Oct. 18. “We don’t
want deaths. We don’t want war.”
The worry now is that the Mexican gov-
ernment’s decision to release Guzmán López
sets a precedent. If other traffickers are ar-
rested, their cohorts could kidnap people to
demand their release. It also raises the spec-
ter of the cartel’s appearing more powerful
than the army, which could have implications
for governability. There has long been an
image of traffickers as rebels; some in Sinaloa
call them valientes (brave ones). Now it seems
as if these rebels are almost in control.
—ioan gRillo

GOOD QUESTION


How did El Chapo’s


drug cartel beat the


Mexican army?


NEWS


TICKER


Northern
Ireland makes
abortion legal

Abortion and same-
sex marriage were
decriminalized in
Northern Ireland on
Oct. 21, after the
regional government
failed to reassemble
in time to block the
legislation. The new
policy, which was
passed by the U.K.’s
Parliament in July,
brings Northern Ireland
in line with the rest of
the nation.

Energy
Secretary Rick
Perry to resign

Rick Perry, one of
President Trump’s
original Cabinet picks,
will resign as Energy
Secretary by the end
of 2019, the White
House said Oct. 17.
Perry, who pushed for
increased U.S. fossil-
fuel exports, has been
subpoenaed by the
House as part of the
impeachment inquiry
into the President.

Netanyahu
fails to build a
coalition

Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu
has failed to form a
coalition government
for the second time
this year, meaning
opposition leader
Benny Gantz gets the
opportunity to do so.
Gantz has until Nov. 21
to form a government;
if he cannot, Israel
could face its third
election in 2019.
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