Meet 3 teens who joined an armed vigilante group in southern Mexico
TIXTLA, Mexico— Since 2012, vigilante groups have risen to prominence in the southern state of Guerrero, providing self-styled security and protection services against organized crime in remote areas of Mexico that are underprotected by state and federal police. Government officials claim many of the vigilante groups are in cahoots with drug cartels, but that hasn’t stopped them from becoming the de facto law in some rural areas.
Now, a new phenomenon is starting in the town of Tixtla, where local teenagers are apparently joining the ranks of an armed vigilante group known as the “Regional Coordinator of Communitarian Authorities,” or CRAC.
These teens, some allegedly as young as 16, reportedly act as communitarian police charged with patrolling the streets in the small neighborhood Barrio del Santuario. Their responsibilities range from keeping the peace to collecting trash. Here’s three young volunteers who told us why they joined the vigilante group.
1. “El Greñas” (tangled hair), 16
El Greñas is a young man of few words. He claims to have left his home at the age of six, when he got tired of running errands for his family and washing cars at the municipal market. He lived briefly with an uncle in the coastal city of Acapulco, but left when he realized he would end up doing more of the same. When he was 11, Greñas says he started to work as a driver at a tourist transportation company.