Friday, May 6, 2011

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'Shorty' now takes the place of Osama as the most wanted man


Mexico City, May 6 (EL UNIVERSAL) .- After the death of Osama Bin Laden, leader of al Qaeda, the number one spot on the list of men wanted by international agencies security became vacant.

"The Guardian", one of the most important newspapers the UK and Europe, estimated that Mexican drug trafficker Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman is the right choice to head the list of most wanted the world over as Semion Mogilevich characters, head of the Russian mafia, Felicien Kabuga, one of the responsible for the genocide in Rwanda, and even Matteo Messina Denaro, head of the Italian Cosa Nostra.

for the British daily, although there is no consensus among agencies like the FBI, DEA and Interpol on what should enlist criminals, Guzman Loera could take the place of bin Laden, who died in an operation by U.S. special forces united in Pakistan.

In one article, the journalist John Henley enlisted the 10 most wanted fugitives by the international agencies. The ranking titled "The new Top 10 Most Wanted" which was drawn from a list made by Forbes magazine, placed first Guzman Loera, whom he described as a man "ruthless and determined."

The publication reported that the leader of the Sinaloa cartel has succeeded in transforming Ciudad Juarez "a strategic point of smuggling, a world capital of crime." He also recalled that the criminal organization of Guzmán Loera maintains direct combat against the Gulf Cartel and La Linea, which has sparked violence in the region.

"The Sinaloa cartel trafficked tons of cocaine from Colombia through Mexico to the United States, is also involved in the market for methamphetamine, marijuana and heroin into the country," said "The Guardian".

The journalist added that security agencies do not coincide in pointing to the most wanted criminals and do not prioritize one or the other so do not give them a special place in their listings.

Everything indicates that "El Chapo" is earning a new nickname: "Man of the lists." And is that the Sinaloa drug trafficker has appeared three times in the list of men Forbes world's richest, and similarly occupies a favorite place in the ranking of the most sought after U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA, for its acronym in English), a position he won in January 2001, along with a reward of five million dollars for information leading to his capture.

To make matters worse, in 2009 the American magazine "Time" included him in its annual list of the hundred most influential people of the world through the power and fortune that holds through their illegal activities.

According to Forbes, Joaquin Guzman is 56 years old and has a fortune of at least one billion dollars, which places it in la posición 1140 entre los más acaudalados del planeta. Además lo ubica como el responsable del 25% del tráfico de drogas de México a Estados Unidos.

yahoo.com.mx

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