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El Salvador gangs push violence to record level

The drug-fueled fury resembles war but lacks clarity as to why so many are
being killed.

By Héctor Tobar ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Times Staff Writer
April 1, 2007

SONSONATE, EL SALVADOR — The list of martyred men and women of the cloth
in this Central American country includes rural priests, U.S. nuns, Jesuit
scholars and an archbishop.

Now, 15 years after the end of a civil war in which many of the religious
workers were killed, a new name has been added to the list: a Roman
Catholic priest, Father Ricardo Antonio Romero, beaten to death in
September just outside this western city of 110,000 people.

Romero, a priest at a Sonsonate church, was one of several Catholic and
community activists helping to organize a protest against a wave of
violence that has swept through Sonsonate and other cities and towns since
2005.

Killing, extortion and kidnapping have reached record levels throughout El
Salvador. U.S. residents with Salvadoran relatives have been roped in, as
kidnappers in this country demand thousands of dollars from them as
ransom.

"He was a very active person; he liked to organize people," a fellow
religious worker said of Romero. The worker asked not to be named because
he feared for his safety. "He spoke out against the situation…. They gave
him a hit man's death."

Sonsonate and its surrounding province, which have a population of more
than 500,000 people, have the nation's highest annual homicide rate: 77
per 100,000 residents, about six times that of Los Angeles in 2005. Once
known as a relatively quiet corner of a war-torn country, Sonsonate is the
stage for a violent drama that looks like war but lacks clarity as to who
is on what side, or why so many people are being killed.

Unlike in the civil war, politics is clearly not behind most of the recent
violence here. The violence, analysts and residents say, is the product of
the growing power of street gangs and the large amounts of illicit cash
and drugs flowing into the city, thanks to El Salvador's role as a way
station in the transshipment of cocaine.

There has been no arrest in Romero's death, one of 1,372 homicides in
Sonsonate province from January 2003 to September 2006, the last month for
which figures are available.

The protest Romero and other priests had worked to organize went forward
in October despite his death. But the fear lingers.

"It's hard to see a way out of this situation," said Gilberto Gallegos, a
55-year-old administrator here for the Catholic charity Caritas. "The
police are useless, they are contaminated by corruption…. We have seen the
loss of values in our society."

To mark the death of popular high school teacher Victor Castañeda last
year, hundreds of students held an impromptu march through the streets of
Sonsonate, carrying a painted portrait of the educator.

"He was a special person, beloved by many, and his death moved many
people," Gallegos said.

But at the Thomas Jefferson Institute, the school where Castañeda taught,
one administrator suspects that a group of students killed him.

"We can't discount that those who killed him were students, working as hit
men for hire," said the administrator, who also asked not to be named
because of security concerns. Castañeda, 37, had been involved in a
dispute with another teacher, who was dismissed amid allegations that he
had hired students to carry out illegal activities, the administrator
said.

With few being prosecuted, scores often are settled, and rivals
intimidated, with murder-for-hire schemes. According to one security
source in El Salvador's federal government, a contract killing can cost as
little as $1,000.

Guadalupe de Castañeda, the late teacher's wife, was standing a few feet
from him when he was killed by more than 20 gunshots at a garage where the
couple had gone to replace a dead car battery.

"People told me, 'We can't understand why anyone would hate him so much to
kill him that way,' " said Guadalupe de Castañeda, who gave birth to the
couple's second child six months after her husband was killed. "It's been
more than a year, and no one has told us anything."

Police in Sonsonate say Victor Castañeda's killing was probably linked to
a criminal gang known as the Baggers. This group — now broken up, police
say — was made up of members of the Mara Salvatrucha, a Salvadoran gang
founded in Los Angeles.

The Baggers made money protecting drug traffickers and as paid killers,
said Juan Mauricio Alfaro Amayo, commissioner of the National Civil Police
in Sonsonate.

Alfaro Amayo, who took charge of the local police two years ago, said he
has worked hard to win the confidence and trust of Sonsonate's residents.
The homicide rate has declined in recent months, he said, but there is a
limit to what police can do.

"It's in the hands of the community," he said. "It's up to them to stop
resolving things with bullets. We police, without the community, cannot be
effective."

Observers say the crime wave is being accelerated by a lucrative drug
trade that makes use of the nearby port of Acajutla. Drug-related violence
has spread to several Pacific Coast cities in the region, including the
Mexican resort of Acapulco and port of Lazaro Cardenas.

On March 6, in one of many such raids, Salvadoran police confiscated a ton
of cocaine being offloaded from swift boats near the border with
Guatemala. U.S. officials estimate that hundreds of tons of Colombian
cocaine pass through Central America on the way to the United States each
year.

"It's the drug bands and the criminals who have the initiative, not us,"
said one senior Salvadoran security official who asked not to be named
because he was not authorized to speak publicly.

Kidnapping and extortion have become widespread, with criminal bands
across the country targeting rich and poor alike.

One Los Angeles woman who asked not to be named told The Times that a
Salvadoran relative was kidnapped after a Christmas reunion in El Salvador
with his U.S. family. The kidnappers demanded $1 million in ransom,
expecting the victim's relatives in the United States to raise the money.
The family put together $15,000 and gave it to the kidnappers, but the
hostage was killed anyway.

"Extortion is now touching everyone from business owners, to schools, to
soccer teams, to families of your soldiers serving in Iraq," H. Douglas
Barclay, the U.S. ambassador, said in a speech in El Salvador in October.

The national homicide rate in El Salvador is 55 per 100,000 residents,
five times the rate the World Health Organization considers a health
epidemic, Barclay said.

"Where is the political will to deal with this problem and solve it, now?"
Barclay said.


Special correspondent Alex Renderos contributed to this report.
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