Zetas Extort Guatemalans via Long Distance Calls
The Zetas have been blamed for a wave of extortions committed against
Guatemalans from Mexico,
which, if true, could illustrate the drug gang's deepening interest in the
Central American country. Authorities in Guatemala
are concerned about a recent series of extortion schemes involving families
with relatives visiting or working in Mexico. Guatemala’s Prensa Libre reports
that victims claim the culprits are members of the Zetas, although the paper
does not provide any corroborating evidence for this claim.
The victims, residents of the southeastern Jalapa
province, claim to have received threatening phone calls from cellphone numbers
in Mexico,
in which they were warned that their relatives in that country would be killed
if they did not provide their bank account details in order to pay ransom. The
perpetrators provided specific information about the relatives in Mexico,
including their physical description and details of their jobs.
Officials from the police's National Anti-Gang Development Unit (PANDA)
report having received 12 complaints in Jalapa
during first three weeks of December, but the total number of victims is
unknown.
As reported, such long distance extortions are on the rise in Mexico. This is
an attractive source of income to criminal groups because it is low risk, and
can be pulled off using only a cellphone number and a few basic details about
the victim. Often, the assailants are not actually affiliated with a criminal
group, and are armed only with information garnered in a simple Google or
Facebook search, like the names of a victim’s children or the type of vehicle
they drive.
However, its possible that the wave of extortions in Guatemala was
indeed carried out by members of the Zetas. The Mexican drug gang controls a
vast portion of the country’s northern Peten region, and it is thought to have penetrated
the highest ranks of the Guatemalan military.
Traditionally, Guatemala
served mostly as a staging point for the Zetas' drug trafficking network. But
if the group is stepping up extortion in Guatemala, it could be a sign that
that their presence there has become so strong that they are now using it as a
source of other types of criminal income.
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