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GUATEMALA CITY
(Reuters) - Guatemala is investigating radio advertisements
seeking elite ex-soldiers, who have been known to work for drug
cartels, to smuggle goods into Mexico, officials said on
Thursday.
The ads were
broadcast in the lawless northern jungle region of Peten, home
to a tough military training center for Kaibil soldiers,
infamous during Guatemala's civil war as a brutal
guerilla-fighting, special forces unit.
"We invite all
citizens who have served in the military and graduated as
Kaibils to work securing vehicles transporting merchandise to
Mexico," the radio spot said, according to a local newspaper.
The ad gave a telephone contact number.
Former Kaibil
soldiers have been lured to work as assassins and run security
for powerful drug lords by cash payments that can be as much as
10 times the average army salary, according to a Kaibil
commander interviewed by Reuters.
Spokesmen for the
Interior Ministry and the army said authorities still were
investigating the origin of the radio ads, which may have been
transmitted on pirated airwaves.
Created in the 1970s
to fight a counter-insurgency campaign against leftist
guerrillas during the 1960-96 civil war, the red-bereted Kaibil
fighters were made to eat raw dog guts as part of their
training. They were accused of massacres during the war, which
left more than 200,000 dead.
More recently,
beheadings of policemen and drug rivals in Mexico have been
blamed on ex-Guatemalan soldiers working with the Zetas, a
renegade unit that broke from the Mexican army to serve as the
Gulf cartel's enforcement arm.
The Zetas have used
brazen advertising along the northern U.S.-Mexico border to
recruit foot soldiers, stringing banners from bridges over main
roads in the towns of Reynosa and Nuevo Laredo offering
well-paid jobs.
Some 75 percent of
the cocaine leaving Colombia is smuggled through Central America
and much of it ends up crossing the porous Guatemalan-Mexican
border. Drug planes land on secret jungle landing strips and
trucks move the cargo north to the United States.
President Felipe
Calderon is cracking down on Mexico's drug gangs, deploying
thousands of police and soldiers to hot spots around the
country. Drug violence in Mexico has killed more than 900 people
this year.
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