Kidnapped radio engineers forced to build comms networks for the Zetas, never seen again
On Wired Danger Room, Robert Beckhusen tells how Mexican drug
cartels, notably the Zetas, kidnap skilled radio engineers and force
them to build out elaborate communications networks -- one comprised
167 antennas. The engineers are kidnapped and usually never seen again,
and are presumed to have been murdered.
For at least six years, Mexico’s cartels have relied in part on a
sophisticated radio network to handle their communications. The Zetas
hide radio antennas and signal relay stations deep inside remote and
hard-to-reach terrain, connect them to solar panels, and then link the
facilities to radio-receiving cellphones and Nextel devices. While the
kingpins stay off the network — they use the internet to send messages —
the radio network acts as a shadow communication system for the
cartels’ lower-level players and lookouts, and a tool to hijack military
radios.
One network spread across northeastern Mexico and dismantled last year
included 167 radio antennas alone. As recently as September, Mexican
marines found a 295-foot-high transmission tower in Veracruz state. And
while the founding leadership of the Zetas originated in the Mexican
special forces — and who might have had the know-how to set up a radio
system — relatively few of the ex-commando types are still active today.
One engineer, named Jose Antonio, was kidnapped in January 2009 while
talking on the phone with his girlfriend outside a mechanics shop. He
worked for ICA Fluor Daniel, a construction company jointly owned by
U.S.-based Fluor Corporation and ICA, Mexico’s largest construction
firm. Antonio’s family contacted the authorities, but were instead
visited by a man claiming to be an ICA employee along with two Zetas.
“They said they were going to help us, and that our contact would be
ICA’s security chief,” said the kidnapped engineer’s mother. But the
group’s message was implicit: Don’t pursue this, or else. The cartel
members were later arrested, but Antonio never returned.
No comments:
Post a Comment