Federales
have arrested Omar Trevino Morales, a top leader of Mexico's Zetas cartel. The
crime boss was caught in a predawn raid in San Pedro Garza Garcia, a wealthy
suburb of the northern city of Monterrey.
Deutsche Welle, 4 Mar 2015
On
Wednesday, Mexican police and soldiers arrested Omar Trevino Morales, the
public face of the Zetas cartel, giving embattled President Enrique Pena Nieto
his second capture of a kingpin in less than a week. Members of the army and
the federal police caught the gang boss, known as "Z-42," without
firing a shot near the northern city of Monterrey, unnamed senior government
officials told news agencies.
Authorities
from Mexico and the US blame the Zetas for several atrocities carried out by
gangs in a wave of violence that has claimed more than 100,000 lives since
2007. Mexico offered a reward of 30 million pesos (1.8 million euros/$2
million) for Trevino's capture on weapons and organized crime charges.
The US Drug
Enforcement Administration offered $5 million (4.5 million euros) for Trevino's
capture on drug-trafficking charges. The DEA had believed him responsible for
several abductions and murders committed in the border city of Nuevo Laredo
between 2005 and 2006 and supplying multikilogram loads of cocaine smuggled in
the United States.
In 2013,
authorities arrested the kingpin's brother, Miguel Angel Trevino, or
"Z-40," described as the most brutal Zetas capo. About a year before
that, Mexico's military had killed the cartel's other biggest leader, Heriberto
"El Lazca" Lazcano. Z-40's arrest and the gunning down of Lazcano had
severely weakened the gang.
Very bloody
history
Founded by
elite army deserters in 1999, the Zetas initially acted as enforcers for the
Gulf Cartel, based along the border with Texas and one of the oldest organized
crime groups in Mexico. But the group struck out on its own in early 2010,
setting off the most violent phase in the country's drug war.
Incidents
pinned on the Zetas include the 2010 massacre of 72 migrant workers, an arson
attack on a Monterrey casino in 2011 that killed 52 people and the dumping of
49 decapitated bodies near the same city in 2012. Authorities also say that the
Zetas melted their enemies in a barrel of "stew."
Trevino's
arrest follows the capture in a firefight of Servando "La Tuta" Gomez, a former teacher and the leader of the Knights Templar drug gang - until
his arrest in the southwestern state of Michoacan last Friday, the most wanted
capo still at large in Mexico. In October, police captured the leader of the Juarez Cartel.
The arrests
bring to a total of 91 the number of members of criminal organizations detained
or incapacitated since President Pena Nieto announced his objective in December
2012. Thirty-one names remain on the president's to-catch list.
In
February, it emerged that a narco gang may have used German-manufactured weapons in the disappearance of more than 40 politically active Mexican
university students.
mkg/lw (EFE, Reuters, AFP, dpa, AP)

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