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Spotlight seems on peso, border security, because of Rodolfo Torre slaying

The recent assassination of popular Mexican gubernatorial candidate Rodolfo Torre has proven the northeast Mexican state of Tamaulipas is not just a flash point in Mexico’s drug war, but of great concern in the ongoing battle for U.S. border security. Reuters reports that Torre – an opposition candidate representing the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) – was slain along with four of his aides within the border town of Valle Hermoso. The responsible party of 16 hooded gunmen is intended to represent the notorious Los Zetas gang.

Rodolfo Terre’s killing keeps border security agents and the investors worried

Since it began in 2006, Mexico’s drug war has claimed a lot more than 25,000 lives, when violent gun battles began spilling to the streets, but Rodolfo Torre’s death is allegedly the largest-scale example to date of a drug cartel attempting to influence Mexico’s politics. Tourists are reportedly avoiding Tamaulipas and foreign investors have bailed on the peso in large numbers. Reuters says that its recent position at 12.71 per $ 1 U.S. was .46 percent weaker. Televised images of Rodolfo Torre’s body within the media have done nothing to reverse this trend. In addition, local stocks remained flat as all of this news out of the recent G-20 summit point toward an end to fiscal stimulus within the region.

Mexico’s credit picture is influences by border security

As reported by the Wall Street Journal, Credit Suisse has had some good things to say about Mexico’s financial condition. Particularly, Credit Suisse praised the nation’s “record or near-record low yields on government debt,” and pointed out to many that Mexico’s central bank is enjoying a nice level of inflation that rests within what experts consider to be a comfort zone. The inflation level has ranged from 2 to 4 percent of late. Also, Credit Suisse believes that Mexico’s recovering growth is, “as good as it gets.”

Creditors are given pause by Mexico’s ongoing drug war. ”The violence problem has worsened notably in 2010, with the number of drug-related killings making new highs, and with organized crime defying the state openly than ever before,” Credit Suisse explained. “We are not sure this is as bad as it gets on the security front, sadly.”

Watching closely is Washington

The United States seems to be noticing. The death of Rodolfo Torre seems to be just a stone’s throw from American soil has the U.S. on alert. Border security against bold drug cartels is no small measure in American politics, from the president’s funding of additional forces to the huge immigration debates. When Los Zetas might not represent any of the illegal traffic that crosses the U.S. border, their actions do little to dissuade states like Arizona from abandoning their own bold stance against the risks of illegal immigration.

Find a lot more details here:

Reuters

reuters.com/article/latestCrisis/idUSN28512369

Wall Street Journal

online.wsj.com/article/BT-CO-20100628-709931.html

Wikipedia

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Los_Zetas

Rodolfo Torre campaign video (en Español):

youtube.com/watch?v=FqAtnZ6B5BE

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