Deep analysis of criminal infiltration in Mexico
The president of the Conference of the Mexican Episcopate (CEM), Ramón Castro Castro, has issued a forceful message during the XI Walk for Peace in Cuernavaca, where he exposed the alarming penetration of organized crime in social and government structures. Their statements, supported by testimonies from officials and citizens, reveal a systemic phenomenon that transcends official statistics.
The normalization of structural violence
According to the bishop, crime has reached levels of influence such that it conditions activities apparently outside its sphere, such as public works, cultural events and even security policies. “Contact with drug trafficking leaders has become an unspoken requirement to manage basic aspects of the administration,” he stated. This phenomenon, known as floor rights, shows collusion between illegal actors and authorities.
Qualitative data collected by civil organizations agree that at least 12 federal entities face this type of cooptation, where criminal networks decide everything from the location of infrastructure to the assignment of contracts. A report from the National Citizen Observatory (2024) corroborates that 68% of municipalities in conflict zones report interference by armed groups in municipal decisions.
The human cost of impunity
During the event, Castro Castro dedicated a special segment to victims of violence, particularly journalists and search mothers. “Information censorship is a control mechanism that perpetuates opacity,” he stressed. Mexico recorded 15 murders of journalists in 2023 according to Article 19, while the Movement for Our Disappeared documented 1,200 active clandestine graves.
The walk brought together representatives from various sectors, including politicians who sought to make their position visible. However, analysts warn that these actions require deep institutional reforms. “Public security cannot depend on symbolic gestures as long as legal loopholes and corruption persist,” said Laura Sánchez, an expert in transitional justice.
The speech closed with a call to rebuild the social fabric through organized denunciation and the demand for accountability. “Peace is not the absence of conflict, but the presence of justice,” concluded the religious, quoting the theologian John Paul Lederach.
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