http://www.myfoxny.com/story/24094105/mexican-drug-cartels-now-make-money-exporting-ore
By MARK STEVENSON
Associated Press
MEXICO CITY (AP) - Mexican drug cartels looking to
diversify their businesses long ago moved into oil theft, pirated goods,
extortion and kidnapping, consuming an ever larger swath of the
country's economy. This month, federal officials confirmed the cartels
have even entered the country's lucrative mining industry, exporting
iron ore to Chinese mills.
Such large-scale illegal mining operations were
long thought to be wild rumor, but federal officials confirmed they had
known about the cartels' involvement in mining since 2010, and that the
Nov. 4 military takeover of Lazaro Cardenas, Mexico's second-largest
port, was aimed at cutting off the cartels' export trade.
That news served as a wake-up call to Mexicans that
drug traffickers have penetrated the country's economy at unheard-of
levels, becoming true Mafia-style organizations, ready to defend their
mines at gun point.
Three Michoacan state detectives were wounded in an
ambush earlier this week when they were traveling to investigate a mine
taken over by criminals. When reinforcements arrived, those officers
were also ambushed, part of a string of attacks on police in Michoacan
on Wednesday and Thursday that left two officers dead and about a dozen
wounded.
The Knights Templar cartel and its predecessor, the
La Familia drug gang, have been stealing or extorting shipments of iron
ore, or illegally extracting the mineral themselves and selling it
through Pacific coast ports, said Michoacan residents, mining companies
and current and former federal officials. The cartel had already imposed
demands for "protection payments" on many in the state, including
shopkeepers, ranchers and farmers.
But so deeply entrenched was the cartel connection
to mines, mills, ports, export firms and land holders that it took
authorities three years to confront the phenomenon head-on. Federal
officials said they are looking to crack down on other ports where drug
gangs are operating.
"This is the terrible thing about this process of
(the cartel's) taking control of and reconfiguring the state," said
Guillermo Valdes Castellanos, the former head of the country's top
domestic intelligence agency. "They managed to impose a Mafia-style
control of organized crime, and the different social groups like port
authorities, transnational companies and local landowners, had to get in
line."
Valdez Castellanos said that even back in 2010, the
La Familia cartel would take ore from areas that were under concession
to private mining companies, sometimes with the aid or complicity of
local farmers and land owners, then sell the ore to processors,
distributors and even, apparently, foreign firms.
Mexico's Economy Department said the problem was so
severe that it prompted the government to quietly toughen rules on
exporters in 2011 and 2012 and make them prove they received their ore
from established, recognized sources.
Many exporters couldn't. In 2012, the department
denied export applications from 13 companies, because they didn't meet
the new rules. And the problem wasn't just limited to Michoacan, or the
Knights Templar cartel.
"Since 2010, evidence surfaced of irregular mining
of iron in the states of Jalisco, Michoacan and Colima," the department
said in a statement to The Associated Press.
"That illegal activity was encouraged by the great
demand for iron by countries such as China, to develop their
industries," according to the department. "Many trading companies began
to build up big stockpiles of legally and illegally obtained iron (ore),
that was later shipped out for export."
A Mexican federal official, who was not authorized
to speak on the record, said the cartels would use a combination of
threats and outright theft to get the ore from mines. He said the nexus
between the cartels and export companies was key.
"They extort the merchandise from mining companies
and then export it through legal companies, or they rob trucks full (of
ore) that later turn up in a legal manner," the official said.
Ofelia Alcala, a resident of the Michoacan mining
village of Aquila, said that since 2012, the Knights Templar cartel has
demanded residents hand over part of the royalty payments from a local
iron ore mine operated by Ternium, a Luxembourg-based consortium.
Alcala, a member of a self-defense group that rose up in arms in Aquila
this summer to kick the cartel out, said the cartel also had been hiring
people to extract the ore without permits, and then exporting it
through another Pacific coast port, Manzanillo.
"They weren't content with getting our money and
robbing our trucks, so they began secretly extracting our minerals,"
said Alcala.
Ternium said in a statement that it has received reports of irregular mining near its operations in Aquila.
"Those have been passed on to the appropriate authorities," the company said in a statement.
Government figures show the amount of iron ore
being exported to China quadrupled between 2008 and the first half of
2013, rising to 4.6 million tons per year, precisely during the period
the La Familia cartel and later the Knights Templar cemented their
control over Michoacan.
In 2008, Lazaro Cardenas handled only 1.5 percent
of Mexico's iron ore exports to China; by mid-2013, the seaport was
shipping out nearly half.
In 2010, the attorney general's office estimated
the cartels shipped 1.1 million tons of illegally extracted iron ore
abroad that year.
Officials said the export scheme may have involved other sea ports, and that more military takeovers may be necessary.
The cartel mining issue also resurfaced last year
in the coal-mining state of Coahuila bordering Texas. The former
governor, Humberto Moreira, called a press conference to claim that
Heriberto Lazcano, leader of the Zetas cartel, was running illegal coal
mining ventures and partnering with legitimate ones. So far, none of the
accusations have been proven.
The only known arrests related to cartel mining
operations occurred in Michoacan in 2010, when Ignacio Lopez Medina, an
alleged member of La Familia, was accused of selling ore illegally to
China, the federal Attorney General's Office said at the time.
But the arrest apparently came to little; the
Attorney General's Office could not say whether Lopez Medina had been
tried or convicted of that crime, nor could The Associated Press
determine if he is represented by a lawyer or is still in custody.
The Chinese Chamber of Commerce did not immediately
respond to requests for information on companies that have been
involved in buying ore from cartels, knowingly or otherwise.
The Chinese Foreign Ministry declined to comment on
whether China had any measures in place to ensure the legal provenance
of such imports.
The iron ore, meanwhile, has both swelled the
cartels' bankrolls, giving them more money to buy guns and bribe
officials, and fed the hunger of Asian steel mills.
And it may be a two-way trade: Precursor chemicals
the cartel uses to make methamphetamines often arrive from China at both
the Lazaro Cardenas and Manzanillo ports.
___
Associated Press writer E. Eduardo Castillo contributed to this report.