Mexico Earns A Rare Victory Against Crime With Qaddafi Son’s Capture

December 7th, 2011 (3) Posted By Angelia Phillips.

CSMonitor:

Has Mexico become a major player in unraveling international plots?

The Mexican government today is touting its role in helping thwart an attempt by Saadi Qaddafi, one of the sons of the late Libyan dictator Muammar Qaddafi, to enter the country under a false name and take up residence in a wealthy resort on Mexico’s Pacific coast.

The news comes less than two months after Mexico announced it had helped foil a plot that included an Iranian-American man allegedly reaching out to drug traffickers in Mexico to assassinate the Saudi ambassador to the US.

Mexico’s most powerful drug cartels

This is not the Mexico that most of its citizens know. In fact, impunity rates are over 90 percent, and it is precisely the lack of functional institutions and transparent investigations behind Mexicans’ worry that its violent fight against organized crime will stubbornly remain on their doorstep, as we detailed in this week’s cover story.

As it remains mired in its drug fight, the government sought a boost from news today of Saadi’s capture. “Thwarting the illegal entry of Saadi Qaddafi in our country represents, without a doubt, yet another demonstration of the capacity of the institutions of Mexico to safeguard the integrity of the national territory,” said Mexico Interior Minister Alejandro Poire this morning at a press conference.

The plan to sneak Saadi and his family into Mexico on private planes using false identification was a multi-country affair, involving Mexican, Canadian, and Danish suspects, with a Canadian woman allegedly at the head of the operations.

But Mexican intelligence agents began unraveling the plot in September, after the ouster of Muammar Qadaffi from Libya. Dubbed “Operation Guest,” the plan involved flights between Mexico, the US, Canada, and Kosovo, as well as countries in the Middle East. Suspects were arrested in November for falsifying documents, opening bank accounts with the documents, and buying safe homes for the family, Mr. Poire said.

To be sure, the Mexican government should be commended for catching an international criminal. But some Mexicans saw it as another example of Mexico being a haven for criminals and fugitives.

“The fact that he thought he would be safe in Mexico shows the collapse in institutions in the first place,” says John Ackerman, a law professor at the National Autonomous University of Mexico.

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  • http://profiles.google.com/herondas John Doe

    I could almost feel sorry for him and his father after they made amends a few years ago with the West, paying to settle any involvement with terrorism, dismantling their budding nuclear infrastructure, stopping any involvement with terrorism, and still the West decides to support their overthrow by the Muslim Brotherhood and Salafis. The West, for this stupidity, deserves the horrors to surely come for enabling Islamists coming to power in multiple countries in the Middle East. This is the biggest strategic mistake by the West since the 1500′s. It will dwarf by an order of magnitude the after effects of Carter’s debacle in Iran.

    • Anonymous

      I agree with your assessment.  Hussein is at the top of his game in destroying a peaceful Mid-East.  So this guy’s father was a jerk, let him go.  Mexico will do better to capture some fast and furious.

  • Richard

    I also have to agree with John. Obummer and his 3 stooges state Dept have thrown our mid-east policy into a rabbit hole from which it will take at least an all out nuc exchange to fix and I do mean FIX!