The Fight Against Gun Smuggling

LAREDO, TEXAS - JUNE 16: A sign warns motorists not to smuggle weapons or ammunitions into Mexico as they approach the international border between the U.S. and Mexico, in Laredo, June 16 2009. Automatic weapons such as AK-47 and AR-15 are purchased in U.S. border states with lax gun laws -there are some 6,700 gun dealers located near the 2,000 miles long U.S.-Mexico border- by straw men (paid about $100 per weapons) working for Mexican drug cartels and smuggled into Mexico, where they fuel the narco-violence that has caused over 15,000 death since 2006. In Mexico, where gun sales are illegal, there is only one gun store, solely for police and army supplies. The ATF estimates that 90% of the 23,000 weapons seized in Mexico since 2005 come from the U.S. Following the admission by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton that the U.S. has a responsability in the narco-violence in Mexico (and fearing that it will spill into the U.S.), the ATF, Border Patrol, Homeland Security, ICE, and local police and sheriff are now trying to stem the flow of weapons into Mexico. But surprise check points inspecting vehicules heading South, in spite of hi-tech device like gas tank cameras, are easy to spot for narco-spies, and do little to slow the flow of arms into Mexico. On the Mexican side, Customs are well equiped with machines that can scan entires trucks, but they remain vulnerable to endemic corruption. (Photo by Gilles Mingasson/Getty Images)
LAREDO, TEXAS - JUNE 16: A sign warns motorists not to smuggle weapons or ammunitions into Mexico as they approach the international border between the U.S. and Mexico, in Laredo, June 16 2009. Automatic weapons such as AK-47 and AR-15 are purchased in U.S. border states with lax gun laws -there are some 6,700 gun dealers located near the 2,000 miles long U.S.-Mexico border- by straw men (paid about $100 per weapons) working for Mexican drug cartels and smuggled into Mexico, where they fuel the narco-violence that has caused over 15,000 death since 2006. In Mexico, where gun sales are illegal, there is only one gun store, solely for police and army supplies. The ATF estimates that 90% of the 23,000 weapons seized in Mexico since 2005 come from the U.S. Following the admission by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton that the U.S. has a responsability in the narco-violence in Mexico (and fearing that it will spill into the U.S.), the ATF, Border Patrol, Homeland Security, ICE, and local police and sheriff are now trying to stem the flow of weapons into Mexico. But surprise check points inspecting vehicules heading South, in spite of hi-tech device like gas tank cameras, are easy to spot for narco-spies, and do little to slow the flow of arms into Mexico. On the Mexican side, Customs are well equiped with machines that can scan entires trucks, but they remain vulnerable to endemic corruption. (Photo by Gilles Mingasson/Getty Images)
The Fight Against Gun Smuggling
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Attestazione:
Gilles Mingasson / Collaboratore
N. Editorial:
91474155
Collezione:
Getty Images News
Data di creazione:
16 giugno 2009
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Fonte:
Getty Images North America
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88660962GM014_GunSmuggling.jpg