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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkTravel & Outdoors | March 2007 

"Narco" Taxi Tours Profit on Mexico Drug War Chaos
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A municipal police officer searches a schoolboy's rucksack at a road block in the resort town of Acapulco. Local and federal law enforcement agencies as well as the armed forces have set up road blocks to search motorists and vehicles all around Acapulco in response to a rise in narcotics related violent crime. (Andrew Winning/Reuters)
Streetwise cabbies in northern Mexico are cashing in on the chaos of a violent drug war by whisking wide-eyed visitors about town in macabre tours of seized narco properties and famous murder scenes, Mexico City's Reforma newspaper reported on Sunday.

Taxi drivers in the Pacific coast city of Mazatlan satisfy tourists' ghoulish fascination with a battle between cartels that killed 2,000 people last year, for about 200 pesos ($18) a trip, the newspaper said.

Located in the state of Sinaloa, one of the worst hit by recent violence in the war between an alliance of local traffickers and the powerful Gulf Cartel, Mazatlan has its fair share of historic drug violence "must-sees."

A boarded up discotheque on Mazatlan's beach front, once the property of the Arellano Felix brothers, who ran a fierce cartel that was once Mexico's most powerful but is now said to be largely dismantled, is the starting point for most tours, Reform reported.

Then comes the spot on the nearby street where police shot dead cartel brother Ramon Arellano Felix in 2002.

Other stops include the nightclub where murdered "norteno" singer Valentin Elizalde, whose songs recounted traffickers' dastardly deeds, reportedly first played in Mazatlan.

Elizalde, known as "El Gallo de Oro," or the Golden Rooster, was gunned down last year in a drive-by shooting after a concert in Reynosa, across the border from McAllen, Texas.

The city of Matamoros across the border from Brownsville, Texas, is the domain of the notorious Gulf Cartel, whose jailed leader Osiel Cardenas was extradited to the United States in January as part of Calderon's anti-drug drive.

The most popular sight for tours in that city is the spot where Cardenas was arrested in 2003 after a shootout with Mexican soldiers, Reforma reported.



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