http://www.insightcrime.org/news-analysis/why-world-most-violent-cities-latin-America
Written by Kyra Gurney - Friday,
21 November 2014
A crime scene in San Pedro Sula, murder capital of the world |
Business Insider revived the list in a
recent publication, based on a report from the
Mexican Citizens' Council for Public Security and Criminal Justice that came
out earlier this year, ranking cities around the world by their homicide rates.
With the exception of Cape
Town, South Africa, the 20 most violent cities are in Latin America and the
Caribbean.
Of the 50 urban areas with
the highest homicide rates, 16 are located in Brazil, nine in Mexico, six in Colombia, and five in Venezuela (see this map link).
San Pedro Sula in Honduras was ranked as the
most violent city in the world for the third consecutive year,
followed by Caracas, Venezuela and Acapulco, Mexico.
InSight Crime has identified
the top five criminal dynamics that have helped make Latin America's cities the
most violent in the world:
1. Booming Domestic Drug Markets
Various Latin American
countries have seen a substantial increase in the size of their domestic drug
markets, spurring the rise of local criminal groups.
Brazil is now the world's second largest market
for cocaine and its derivatives, after the United States, while Argentina, Peru and Colombia have also seen significant growth in their
domestic markets in recent years.
As local criminal groups
emerge to supply local markets, turf wars over transport and sales territory
can lead to spikes in murder rates.
This is one of the factors
driving homicides in Brazil, which has seen the domestic drug trade
expand beyond Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo and into the rest of the country.
Gangs have spread to the northern and northeastern regions of
Brazil, home to several of the cities on the list including Salvador
(#13), Natal (#12), João Pessoa (#9) and Fortaleza (#7).
The same dynamic is seen
with larger criminal organizations, like the First Capital Command (PCC), which
originated in São Paulo and now has a presence in 24 of Brazil's 27 states.
2. The Fragmentation of Organized Crime
Latin America has seen the
fall of many major drug kingpins in recent years, causing criminal
organizations to splinter into smaller factions.
Without the manpower to
carry out large-scale transnational drug trafficking operations, these smaller
groups typically turn to more localized -- and often more violent -- criminal
activities, like kidnapping and extortion.
Splinter groups often fight
among themselves for control of local criminal businesses.
This is particularly true in
Mexico, where the security
forces have dealt heavy blows to criminal groups.
The Zetas have lost several high-ranking members in
recent years, which has led to the cartel's fragmentation
into semi-independent cells.
At least three of the
Mexican cities on the list -- Nuevo Laredo (#30), Victoria (#22), and Torreon
(#18) -- are situated in states with a significant Zetas presence.
The Beltran Leyva
Organization (BLO) has also suffered a loss of leadership and split into several rival factions,
including criminal groups the Guerreros Unidos and Los Rojos, which are engaged
in a bloody turf war.
These groups are fighting over territory in
the states of Guerrero and Morelos, home to two of the
cities on the list: Acapulco (#3) and Cuernavaca (#43).
In Guatemala, a 2013 spike in murders coincided
with the deaths and arrests of criminal leaders.
Anti-narcotics prosecutors
told local media that the power vacuum had spawned splinter groups
engaged in battles for control of the criminal underworld.
Guatemala City is number
eight on the list.
3. Drug Transit Nations Become Crime Hubs
Countries that serve as drug
transit nations tend to see high rates of violence and crime.
To facilitate drug shipments
through a country, transnational criminal organizations typically hire local groups to guard
and transport the shipments, and sometimes pay them in drugs.
This can spur the
development and increased sophistication of local gangs, as well as the growth
of domestic drug markets.
Transnational criminal
organizations also set up operations in
transit nations to oversee drug trafficking, and bring violence with them.
One example of this
phenomenon is Venezuela, home to five of the world's most violent cities,
including Caracas, which is ranked as number two.
Venezuela is a major
transshipment point for Colombian cocaine and has seen Colombian criminal
groups battle for control of drug trafficking
routes.
Four of the five Venezuelan
cities on the list are near the coast, and may serve as transit points for drug
shipments headed to the United States and Europe via maritime routes.
Honduras has also seen violence surge and
street gangs grow more sophisticated as
the country has become a major drug transit hub. Honduras is home to the
world's most violent city, San Pedro Sula, which is located near the border
with Guatemala and close to
Puerto Cortes, Honduras' main port.
The city also has a major
gang problem, with the Mara Salvatrucha (MS13) and Barrio 18 battling for control of the
local drug trade, and the presence of the Sinaloa Cartel.
4. Conflict and the Legacy of Civil
War
Civil wars in El Salvador, Guatemala, and Nicaragua
helped give birth to Central America's ruthless gangs.
The MS13, one of the region's largest and most
powerful street gangs, was founded in Los Angeles in the 1980s by Central
American refugees fleeing armed conflict.
When the US government
deported these refugees in the late 1990s and early 2000s, those involved in
criminal groups transformed the war-torn Northern Triangle region -- made up of
Guatemala, El Salvador, and Honduras -- into a hub for
gang activity.
Armed conflict has also led
to considerable violence in Colombia, where guerrilla organizations have
battled the state for the last 50 years.
The paramilitary groups that
purportedly formed to defend against the guerrillas have now morphed into
criminal syndicates known as BACRIM (a name derived from the Spanish
"bandas criminales" or "criminal bands"), which are
involved in turf wars over drug trafficking routes in major cities including Cali (#4), Medellin (#35), and Cucuta (#33).
5. Corruption and the Criminalization of Local
Government
Ties between criminal groups
and public officials play a crucial role in facilitating criminal activity and
creating a culture of impunity.
Corrupt security forces can
keep criminal groups informed, shield them from law enforcement operations, and
facilitate drug shipments, while ties to politicians and local elites lend
criminals a façade of legitimacy.
This dynamic was made
painfully clear by a recent case involving the disappearance of 43 student
protesters in Guerrero, Mexico.
The mayor and his wife in
the town where the students went missing allegedly ordered the attacks,
which authorities believe were carried out by the Guerreros Unidos criminal
group.
Following the attacks, intelligence reports indicated
that 12 mayors from the state of Guerrero may have links to organized crime.
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