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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkNews Around the Republic of Mexico | December 2008 

Mexico Drug Gang Likely Behind U.S. Kidnapping
email this pageprint this pageemail usRobin Emmott - Reuters
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Members of the Mexican Federal Police patrol the city of Culiacan to reinforce the surveillance operation against drug trafficking in Sinaloa state, in May 2008. A top US anti-kidnapping expert was kidnapped in northeast Mexico last week, reports said Monday, in an audacious move amid a wave of drug-related violence and kidnappings. (AFP/Omar Torres)
Monterrey, Mexico - An American anti-kidnapping expert who was himself abducted last week in northern Mexico was likely snatched by drug traffickers seeking to protect their turf, police said on Tuesday.

Gunmen hauled Felix Batista into a white SUV outside a restaurant last week in the relatively safe industrial city of Saltillo in Coahuila state, where he was giving seminars on security to police and business people.

Batista, a Cuban-American from Miami who is credited with negotiating the release of people abducted by Colombian rebels, was snatched when he stepped outside the restaurant after answering a cell phone call, Coahuila state attorney general's office said.

No ransom has been demanded, police said.

The local attorney general's office said Batista had been invited by state police to give talks on security amid Mexico's gruesome drug war, which has killed more than 5,300 people this year, double the 2007 level.

"We don't believe this was a normal kidnapping, more like the work of drug gangs wanting to show their power," said an official at the state attorney general's office. "Batista was giving seminars, he wasn't negotiating anyone's release."

Batista's Houston-based employer, security consultancy ASI Global, said he was on private business in Coahuila.

"In light of the rampant corruption among law enforcement in Mexico, the involvement of police agencies in organizing Batista's visit could well mean that his kidnappers received information about his schedule from corrupt police officers," U.S. security consultancy Stratfor said in a report Monday.

Hundreds of people are kidnapped in Mexico every year and the number of victims has increased sharply as drug gangs, under pressure from President Felipe Calderon's army-backed crackdown, seek new revenues to fund their operations.

Mexican drug gangs in league with corrupt cops are warring over smuggling routes into the United States, clashing with some 40,000 state security forces seeking to crush their operations and control escalating violence.

(Editing by Doina Chiacu)



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