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The general didn't get much time. After a long, controversial
career, Brig. Gen. Mauro Enrique Tello Quinones retired from active
duty last month and moved to this Caribbean playground to work for the
Cancun mayor and fight the drug cartels that have penetrated much of
Mexican society. He lasted a week.
Tello, 63, along with his
bodyguard and a driver, were kidnapped in downtown Cancun last Monday
evening, taken to a hidden location, methodically tortured, then driven
out to the jungle and shot in the head. Their bodies were found Tuesday
in the cab of a pickup truck on the side of a highway leading out of
town. An autopsy revealed that both the general's arms and legs had
been broken.
The audacious kidnapping and killing of one of the
highest-ranking military officers in Mexico drew immediate expressions
of outrage from the top echelons of the Mexican government, which
pledged to continue the fight against organized crime that took the
lives of more than 5,300 people last year. Military leaders, who are
increasingly at the front lines of the war against the cartels, vowed
not to let Tello's death go unsolved or unpunished.
In the wake
of the triple killing, the Mexican army swept into Cancun in a show of
brute force. The military is now running high-visibility patrols and
roadblocks around the Yucatan resort capital, complete with masked
soldiers with automatic rifles rumbling in open trucks past the
gleaming white rows of tourist hotels.
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