Rival Gangs Riot in Mexican Prison

2010-08-04 392

A riot between rival gangs has broken out at a jail in Mexico. The conflict killed two and injured at least seven.

A standoff at a prison in the Mexican border town of Ciudad Juarez. Inmates stood on the roof after a riot killed two and injured at least seven. Two rival gangs confronted each other as more than a hundred relatives of inmates visited.

[Relative of Inmate]:
"We started hearing gun shots and then the guards sounded desperate through the radios saying there was a shootout and they would not allow anyone in and to close the gates, everything. The guard told us, 'Run out of here because if you stay here you won't be able to get out and give thank God you didn't go in.'"

Authorities regained control of the prison with help from fireman, ambulances and federal forces.

But Ciudad Juarez, on the border of Texas and New Mexico, has become an example of the spiralling violence by rival gangs fighting over the lucrative drug trade into the United States.

Mexican President Felipe Calderon made stamping out drug cartels his first priority, but drug-related murders have skyrocketed since he took office in 2006.

[Eduardo Gallo, President, Mexico United Against Crime Citizens Group]:
"If plan A does not give us the immediate result, legalizing could give it to us, practically with a single blow, and we have to measure all the consequences. I understand this could be used to judge me and accuse me of being crazy, but if we don't see all of our options, we will simply burden ourselves with taboos and we won't solve the problem."

An estimated 26,000 people have died in the last four years from drug-related violence.

The US provides Mexico with $1 billion for security, but many say the drug war cannot be won without clamping down on assault weapons smuggled southward.