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A little about Playa Zipolite, The Beach of the Dead . . .

Playa Zipolite, Oaxaca, Southern Mexico, on the Pacific Ocean. A little bit about my favorite little get-away on this small world of ours.

Zipolite, a sweaty 30-minute walk west from Puerto Angel, brings you to Playa Zipolite and another world. The feeling here is 1970's - Led Zep, Marley, and scruffy gringos.

A long, long time ago, Zipolite beach was usually visited by the Zapotecans...who made it a magical place. They came to visit Zipolite to meditate, or just to rest.

Recently, this beach has begun to receive day-trippers from Puerto Angel and Puerto Escondido, giving it a more TOURISTY feel than before.

Most people come here for the novelty of the nude beach, yoga, turtles, seafood, surf, meditation, vegetarians, discos, party, to get burnt by the sun, or to see how long they can stretch their skinny budget.

I post WWW Oaxaca, Mexico, Zipolite and areas nearby information. Also general budget, backpacker, surfer, off the beaten path, Mexico and beyond, information.

REMEMBER: Everyone is welcome at Zipolite.

ivan

Saturday, October 6, 2012

Murder of Miami’s ‘Cocaine Queen’ Offers Teaching Moment The Truth of the Drug War Won’t Be Found in Hollywood or the Mainstream Media — Which Both Work From the Same Tired Script By Bill Conroy Via The Narcosphere October 6, 2012



Murder of Miami’s ‘Cocaine Queen’ Offers Teaching Moment

The Truth of the Drug War Won’t Be Found in Hollywood or the Mainstream Media — Which Both Work From the Same Tired Script

By Bill Conroy
Via The Narcosphere

October 6, 2012

Murder of Miami’s ‘Cocaine Queen’ Offers Teaching Moment


The Truth of the Drug War Won’t Be Found in Hollywood or the Mainstream Media — Which Both Work From the Same Tired Script
Griselda Blanco, 69, was cut down in front of a butcher shop in Medellin, Colombia, in early September by a middle-aged man who was delivered to the murder scene on the back of a motorcycle — and who calmly, methodically, jumped off the back of that bike, held a gun to Blanco’s head, and pumped two bullets into her brain.
Blanco, well prior to her death, had been pumped up as a rock star of the drug war by the US mainstream media and various Hollywood-inspired films, such as the Cocaine Cowboysdocumentary. In fact, at the time of her death, several feature films about her life as a big-time cocaine dealer and killer in Miami in the 1970s and early 1980s were reportedly in the works — including one in which movie star Jennifer Lopez is seeking to play the leading role as the “Narco Queen” in hopes of winning an Oscar, according to Fox News Latino.
But Blanco, like so many other US-media created narco anti-heroes, is more fiction than reality, and a prime example of how US “news” coverage of the drug war has become essentially indistinguishable from the fiction manufactured in Tinsel Town.
Baruch Vega, a long-time CIA asset who, in the 1990s and early 2000s, helped to broker cooperating-source deals on behalf of US law enforcement agencies and the CIA with dozens of major Colombian narco-traffickers, describes Blanco as, at best, a mid-level player in the cocaine business during her prime.
“She was made out to be the queen of cocaine, but there were much more powerful people,” Vega says. “She was responsible for killing a lot of people [street lore puts the number at a couple hundred], but she wasn’t the biggest killer. The biggest hit man at the time [in Miami cocaine wars in the early 1980s] was a Venezuelan named Amilcar Rodriquez. Many of the people that Blanco claimed she killed, he was responsible for killing, but he was happy to let her take the credit.”
Nonetheless, Blanco had made a long list of deadly enemies by the time she was 69 — after serving years in a US prison prior to being deported in 2004 back to her native land of Colombia. And it is the still-open question of who assassinated her on the streets of Medellin last month that opens a door to the past, to the obscured history of the drug war that you will not read about in the New York Times or see exposed on CNN, or even in a Hollywood film — precisely because it is not fiction.
The Cocaine Coup
One murder scene that Blanco’s fingerprints are all over, most observers agree, is the Dadeland Mall shootout in Miami in 1979, which left two people dead in the wake of a barrage of bullets in front of a liquor store. The assassins in that hit job worked for Blanco, and one of the men left dead, not reported until this time, was the father of a brutal Colombian killer and drug dealer named Papo Mejia (Luis Fernando Arcila Mejia), according to Mike Levine, a retired DEA agent who was working some of the biggest deep undercover cases for the agency in the 1970s and 1980s — both in the US and South America.
One of those cases, dubbed Operation Hun, targeted major Bolivian and Colombian narco-traffickers, including Mejia. But Levine, author of a detailed and revelatory nonfiction drug-war book, The Big White Lie, insists that, due to CIA intervention and complicity in the drug trade, most of the targets of Operation Hun walked free, with a few exceptions, such as Mejia — who was ultimately convicted of narco-trafficking-related crimes, sentenced to a couple decades in a US prison and, upon his release in the early 2000s, deported to Colombia.
But prior to his arrest in the early 1980s, Mejia himself was the target of a Blanco assassination attempt — the two were bitter rivals in Miami’s cocaine street wars — one in which the sicario stabbed Mejia some 10 times with a rusty bayonet blade, in broad daylight, at Miami International Airport, shortly after Mejia had debarked from a flight from Colombia. Mejia survived. But the attack allowed DEA — who to that point had lost track of him — to arrest him on charges related to Operation Hun. The key cooperating source in that DEA undercover operation was a beautiful and deadly Bolivian named Sonia Atala — who, by any measure, was the true “Cocaine Queen” of the 1980s. She worked with Levine, posing as his lover, as part of Operation Hun — and for whom the operation was named (“Atala” the Hun; DEA humor). Atala also happened to be a key CIA asset, according to Levine.
“Of all the drug barons in Bolivia, Sonia’s connections in Colombia and the United States — where most Bolivians had feared to go — were the best. [Bolivian Minister of the Interior Col. Luis] Arce Gomez quickly recognized her value to the government and put her in charge of selling the government’s cocaine, then piling up in bank vaults and beginning to rot,” Levine writes in his book the Big White Lie. “The Cocaine Coup had turned Sonia Atala into the chief international sales representative of the country [Bolivia], then producing [in the early 1980s] 80 percent of the world’s cocaine — beyond doubt the biggest drug dealer in the world.”
Levine explains that in 1979 and 1980, the center-left Bolivian government of Lidia Gueiler Tejada had agreed to work with DEA in targeting that nation’s major narco-barons, individuals such as Roberto Suarez, Jose Gasser and Alfredo Guitierrez. That led these narco-traffickers, cloaked in the garbs of legitimate businessman, along with elements of the Bolivian military, who were assisted by former Nazis, literally — chief among them, Klaus Barbie, dubbed the Butcher of Lyon for the brutal torture tactics he employed in Nazi Occupied France during World War II — to organize a successful coup d'etat against Gueiler’s government. Levine adds that the CIA backed this “Cocaine Coup” and that many of its chief architects and key players, the top narco-traffickers in Bolivia, were, in fact, CIA assets.
But Levine is not alone in his assessment of the forces behind the Cocaine Coup, which resulted in making Bolivia a South American narco-state in the early 1980s and a major supplier of cocaine to the US during the period in which Griselda Blanco and Papo Mejia were fighting over the streets of Miami.
Robert Parry, a former Associated Press reporter who played a key role in exposing the Iran/Contra scandal in the mid-1980s, in a story written in 1998, describes Bolivia’s Cocaine Coup (which, Parry claims, also was aided by the neo-fascist/US-supported Argentine government of that era, a government that launched a “Dirty War” against so-called “leftists,” which resulted in the “disappearing” and torture/murders of the thousands of Argentines in the late 1970s).
From Parry’s story, co-written with Marta Gurvich:
In testimony before a U.S. Senate subcommittee, another Argentine intelligence officer, named Leonardo Sanchez-Reisse, described that operation.  A financial expert, Sanchez-Reisse said he had been recruited by Argentine intelligence in 1976 and specialized in the service's international operations. …
Sanchez-Reisse testified that the Miami [money laundering] operation was based in two front companies: Argenshow, a promoter of U.S. entertainment acts in Argentina, and the Silver Dollar, a pawn shop that was licensed to sell guns.
He asserted the real activity of the companies was to transfer more than $30 million — much of it from drug lords — into various political and paramilitary operations in South and Central America. He claimed the operation was approved by the CIA, which maintained close ties to the Argentine generals.
According to Sanchez-Reisse, the money operation's first major activity was funneling drug proceeds into a 1980 coup to overthrow an elected center-left government in Bolivia. That new government had offended Bolivia's powerful cocaine barons, including Roberto Suarez, then one of the biggest traffickers in the world.
Besides the weapons from Argentina, the Bolivian putschists got help from an international band of ex-Nazis and neo-nazis led by Klaus Barbie, known as the Butcher of Lyon for his work in Hitler's Gestapo.
In July 1980, the coup overthrew the Bolivian government and slaughtered many of its supporters. Some victims were tortured by Argentinean experts flown in to demonstrate their expertise.
The putsch, which became known as the Cocaine Coup, installed Luis Garcia Meza [as president of Bolivia] and other drug-connected military officers [such as Arce Gomez] who promptly turned Bolivia into South America's first modern narco-state. The secure supply of Bolivian cocaine was important to the development of the Medellin cartel in the early 1980s.
Parry's story continues:
… Many of the Argentine intelligence officers who assisted in the Cocaine Coup followed up their victory in Bolivia by moving northward into Central America to train a ragtag force of Nicaraguan contras.
Over 18 months, Sanchez-Reisse testified, more than $30 million went through [the CIA-sanctioned money laundering] operation. The money supported the Bolivian coup, the contras and other right-wing paramilitary activities in Central America….
It is important to note that this history still resonates today, in the current US presidential election. Candidate Mitt Romney’s signature company, Bain Capital, was launched in the early 1980s with the help of seed capital from Central American oligarchs, who, according to some press reports, helped to finance right-wing death squads operating in Central America at the time.
Prime Suspect
But in the drug business, treachery is right up there with greed and power as the guiding forces of the trade, and Bolivia’s Queen of Cocaine, Atala, fell victim to those rules. She had grown too powerful in the eyes of some of the Bolivian narcos running the country in 1980 and 1981, and so they double-crossed her on a coke deal she had made with the Colombian Mejia — then in his mid-20s. She had no place to run.
Mejia was out to kill her and Atala’s Bolivian allies had turned against her, according to Levine, so she ran to her only other “friends,” the DEA — with the CIA still, always, in the background. That resulted in Operation Hun, with Levine going undercover in an extremely dangerous assignment working to make cases, with Atala’s assistance as an informant, targeting her Bolivian and Colombian associates.
But there was a big problem with the plan, Levine says. The CIA had no intention of turning over their still-useful narco-trafficker assets in Latin America at a time when they were helping to sponsor dirty wars across that region that were deemed to be in the US interest in its battle against Communism — the War on Terror of its day.
As a result, the cases Levine and others helped to build in the early 1980s against the major Bolivian narcos behind the Cocaine Coup, including Suarez, Gasser and Guitierrez, all fell apart due to the inherent conflict between the objectives of US intelligence agencies and US law enforcement — in which the former holds most of the cards. Even Atala, in the end — a woman who, as Levine writes in the Big White Lie, had a “detachment of Klaus Barbie’s Nazi mercenaries … placed at her disposal” — proved to be beyond the reach of the law.
Under cross-examination by defense counsel Stephen Finta, Sonia [Atala] admitted that, with the full knowledge, cooperation, and aid of the US government, all her vast wealth and properties in Bolivia had been returned to her…. It was also revealed that Sonia was soon to return to Bolivia [in the early 1980s], still the number one source country in the world for cocaine, once again free to reign supreme as the Queen with the Crown of Snow.
But for Levine, the story does not have a fairy tale ending. After Mejia was nearly stabbed to death in Miami by one of Blanco’s assassins, Mejia was arrested by DEA, due to the case built against him in Operation Hun, and ultimately sent to jail, because of Levine’s case work and testimony.
Levine told Narco News that Mejia is a very vengeful and skilled killer, who, at one time, “had an army of hit men” under his command, and has to be considered among the prime suspects in the September assassination of Blanco in Medellin.
Levine described the scenario as follows in a recent email:
1.  The Cocaine Cowboy War [in Miami] was raging when we began Operation Hun that targeted Papo Mejia among others, using Sonia Atala as the bait. What we learned was that Griselda Blanco had already killed Papo's father in the infamous Miami Dade[land] Mall, broad daylight shooting.
2. We (DEA undercover team) are then successful in indicting Mejia via an elaborate undercover sting, but he is nowhere to be found.
3. Griselda has her own intelligence system and learns that Papo is landing at Miami International from Colombia in [on Sept. 15, 1982]. She pays Miguel Perez $250,000 to off him. Perez catches Mejia after he passes customs and in broad daylight stabs him ten times with a bayonet.
4. He survives … stands trial and is sentenced to 27 years.... I retire [from DEA] and become an expert [court] witness. 
5. Years go by and his [Mejia’s] lawyer, Steve Finta, in the mid-90s is trying to get Papo [Mejia] an early release [from prison]. We have a meeting. He wants to hire me as an expert to get Papo out…. This is the actual dialogue: 
Me: “You want me to help get him out, when I’m on his hit list?”
Steve [Finta]: “I talked to him. You're no longer on the top of the list….” (Real life is so much stranger than fiction.)
6.  Papo is eventually released from prison with no help from me. He is deported to Colombia.
7.  Griselda [Blanco] is released after Papo and deported to Colombia where she is (recently) murdered.
8.  Question: Is Papo Mejia now working his way down his long-held "bucket" hit list?
In short: I'd like to make this public, at least, as a measure of self-defense. At the very least, it should also alert the Colombian Police to their most likely subject.
Narco News attempted to contact Mejia’s former attorney, Finta, for comment. The number for his Miami-area law office is disconnected. He did not reply to an email query.
Stay tuned…..




Oaxaca in the Heart of México


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Welcome To Oaxaca, Let's go2mexico.com

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It has peaks almost 10,000 feet (more than 3,000 meters) high, caverns among the deepest in the world, virgin beaches, hidden jungles, and luminous valleys that house populations where, as a crucible, cultures of all people who once lived in its midst come together.
Oaxaca, the State Capital, declared Humanity’s Cultural Patrimony by UNESCO, owes its fame to the beauty and harmony of its architecture, the richness of its cultural traditions, the wide variety of its typical foods, and its soft temperate climate, spring-like throughout the year. Its name comes from Huaxyácal (the apex of the guajes, a variety of acacia, of Huaxín, guajes, and yacatl, summit). The Aztecs applied the name to the summit where they built a fortress in 1486. At arrival, the Spaniards founded, next to the old fort, the new Villa de Antequera, and a few years later, returned to the old Aztec fortress to erect, in the same guaje summit, a city that, in 1529 would be founded, built, and peopled as Villa de Oaxaca.
The name of Oaxaca comes from the Nahuatl word Huayacac. Its roots are Huaxin (kind of acacia) and Yacalt (peak, edge, top), top of the acacias.
King Carlos V of Spain elevated Oaxaca to the rank of "City" in 1532.
Currently, it has 244,727 inhabitants and 3,224,270 people are living all over the state.
* The source of this information is the Oaxaca-Travel website. We publish this information with the authorization of Mr. Juan Antonio Ruiz W. producer of the Oaxaca-Travel website.
Weather Report Click Here
Oaxaca Articles Click Here


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At the Hotel


 

25 Important Words
    el cuarto de baño
    the bathroom

    la cama
    the bed

    la pensión
    the boarding house

    el cuarto doble
    the double room

    el ascensor
    the elevator

    la llave
    the key

    la entrada
    the lobby

    el/la gerente
    the manager

    servicio de cuarto
    room service

    la ducha
    the shower

    el portero
    the porter

    el botones
    the bellhop

    el huésped
    the guest

    el balcón
    the balcony

    con aire acondicionado
    air-conditioned

    la bañera
    the bathtub

    la cuenta
    the bill

    el recibo
    the receipt

    el desayuno
    the breakfast

    la cena
    the dinner

    el almuerzo
    the lunch

    cuarto con desayuno
    bed and breakfast

    la cama matrimonial
    the double bed

    pensión completa
    full board

    media pensión
    half board
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At the Restaurant


 

25 Important Words
    la bebida
    the beverage

    bien cocido
    well-done

    la cuchara
    the spoon

    el cuchillo
    the knife

    la cuenta
    the bill

    la mesa
    the table

    el mesero / el camarero
    the waiter

    el menú
    the menu

    menú del día
    set menu

    el pan
    bread

    picante
    spicy

    la pimienta
    the pepper

    el pimentero
    the pepper shaker

    el platillo
    the saucer

    el plato
    the plate

    poco cocido
    rare

    el postre
    dessert

    la propina
    the tip

    la sal
    the salt

    el salero
    the salt shaker

    la servilleta
    the napkin

    la tarjeta de crédito
    the credit card

    la taza
    the cup

    el tenedor
    the fork

    el vaso
    the glass
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25 Important Words
    hola
    hi

    adiós
    goodbye


    yes

    no
    no

    por favor
    please

    gracias
    thanks

    muchas gracias
    thanks a lot

    dispénseme
    excuse me

    perdón
    pardon

    OK
    OK

    de nada
    you're welcome

    hasta mañana
    see you tomorrow

    hasta luego
    see you later

    adelante
    come in

    siéntese
    sit down

    repita
    say it again

    traduzca
    translate

    señor
    sir

    señora
    madam

    señorita
    miss

    el amigo
    the friend (male)

    la amiga
    the friend (female)

    el esposo
    the husband

    la esposa
    the wife

    salud
    cheers, gesundheit
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Downtown


 

25 Important Words
    el teléfono público
    the public telephone

    los servicios
    public toilets (1)

    los baños públicos
    public toilets (2)

    el paradero de autobuses
    the bus stop

    la estación del metro
    the subway station

    el estacionamiento
    the parking garage

    el museo
    the museum

    el semáforo
    the traffic light

    la farmacia
    the drugstore

    el mercado
    the market

    el poste de luz
    the streetlight

    la calle
    the street

    la policía
    the police

    el cruce
    the intersection

    el letrero
    the street sign

    la panadería
    the bakery

    la esquina
    the corner

    el basurero
    the trash basket

    el/la peatón(a)
    the pedestrian

    la librería
    the bookstore

    el taxi
    the taxi cab

    la avenida
    the avenue

    el zócalo
    the main square

    el quiosco de periódicos
    the news stand

    el supermercado
    the supermarket
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    la playa
    the beach

    el mar
    the sea

    tomar el sol
    to sunbathe

    la piscina
    the swimming pool

    el/la salvavidas
    the lifeguard

    el colchón neumático
    the air mattress

    la sombrilla
    the umbrella

    la pelota de playa
    the beach ball

    los lentes oscuros
    the sunglasses

    el traje de baño
    the bathing suit

    la ola
    the wave

    nadar
    to swim

    la arena
    the sand

    el respirador
    the snorkel

    la crema solar
    the sunblock

    la concha marina
    the sea shell

    la nevera
    the cooler

    el/la bañista
    the sunbather

    el agua
    the water

    el planeador de mar
    the surfboard

    el planeador pequeño de agua
    the kickboard

    la costa
    the coast

    la toalla
    the towel

    la marea alta
    the high tide

    la marea baja
    the low tide
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At the Airport


 

25 Important Words
    la maleta
    the suitcase

    el equipaje
    the baggage

    el boleto
    the ticket

    el guardia de seguridad
    the security guard

    el detector de metales
    the metal detector

    el seleccionador de rayos
    the x-ray machine

    la banda
    the conveyor belt

    el carrito de equipaje
    the baggage cart

    el maletero
    the porter

    la sección de no fumar
    the non-smoking section

    el pasaporte
    the passport

    el talón
    the baggage claim ticket

    el maletín
    the carry-on bag

    la aduana
    the customs office

    el reclamo de equipaje
    the baggage claim area

    el pase de abordar
    the boarding pass

    el, la sobrecargo
    the flight attendant

    el compartimiento de equipaje
    the luggage compartment

    la mesita
    the tray table

    el pasillo
    the aisle

    la terminal
    the terminal building

    la pista
    the runway

    el vuelo
    the flight

    el ala
    the wing

    la cola
    the tail
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Medical Care


 

25 Important Words
    la medicina
    the medicine

    la cápsula
    the capsule

    la tableta
    the tablet

    la píldora
    the pill

    la inyección
    the injection

    el ungüento
    the ointment

    descanso en cama
    bed rest

    la cirugía
    the surgery

    la toalla calentadora
    the heating pad

    la bolsa de hielo
    the ice pack

    el soporte
    the sling

    el enyesado
    the cast

    la muleta
    the crutch

    el médico
    the doctor

    la enfermera
    the nurse

    el salpullido
    the rash

    los escalofríos
    the chills

    el dolor
    the pain

    alta presión sanguínea
    high blood pressure

    el resfriado
    the cold

    la torcedura
    the sprain

    la infección
    the infection

    la fractura
    the broken bone

    la cortada
    the cut

    el golpe
    the bruise
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Oral
Exercises #4


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The Mexico Travel Guide

Shopping


 

25 Important Words
    el carrito
    the shopping cart

    la cesta
    the basket

    la carnicería
    the butcher's shop

    la panadería
    the bakery

    el quiosco
    the newsstand

    la tienda de modas
    the clothes shop

    la papelería
    the stationery shop

    la plaza del mercado
    the marketplace

    la zapatería
    the shoe shop

    caro(a)
    expensive

    barato(a)
    cheap

    ir de compras
    to go shopping

    comprar
    to buy

    pagar
    to pay

    abierto
    open

    cerrado
    closed

    cerrado al mediodía
    closed for lunch

    la tarjeta de crédito
    the credit card

    la joyería
    the jewelers

    la salida
    the exit

    la entrada
    the entrance

    de mejor calidad
    better quality

    el recibo
    the receipt

    defectuoso(a)
    defective

    roto(a)
    broken
10 Useful Phrases


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