Sinaloa Cartel threat appears in southwest Colombia

Death threats signed by Mexico’s Sinaloa Cartel have appeared in southwest Colombia, indigenous authorities from the region said Saturday.

According to the Cauca Regional Indigenous Council (CRIC), two different death threats from a group claiming to be the “New Generation Sinaloa Cartel” have been circulating in the northern Cauca region since Thursday.

The “Sinaloa” threats

In one of the messages, self-proclaimed members of the Mexican drug cartel said they were in the process of creating an alliance with the ELN, EPL and FARC dissidents and taking control of “everything related to drug trafficking.”

“We will be alerting you about meetings that will be held in some of the townships,” the message said.

In a second message, the the group warned that “for those people who call themselves indigenous guards your time has come.”

New Generation Sinaloa Cartel

Who is who?

The announced arrival of the New Generation Sinaloa Cartel adds to existing confusion and tensions in the northern Cauca region over who controls the drug trade.

The Mexican narcos have been working with Colombian drug traffickers and guerrillas since the 1980s.

The cartel has allegedly increased its control in Colombia to make sure that the 2017 demobilization of the FARC guerrilla group didn’t disrupt the drug trade, but it is unlikely that the cartel flew in a bunch of armed Mexicans to enforce this control.

The question is who is claiming to be acting on their behalf in the virtually lawless area; at least five new armed groups have appeared in northern Cauca after the FARC laid down its weapons.


Illegal armed groups active in northern Cauca before 2017

Post-FARC groups in northern Cauca


Narcos vs native Colombians

The demobilization of the FARC created a major power vacuum in northern Cauca, one of Colombia’s most troubled provinces.

The native Colombian peoples living in the region are caught in the middle as they try to protect their territories from invaders.

According to the Colombia chief of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, Pierre Lapaque, the Cauca province has seen an increase in coca cultivation between 2017 and 2017.

The northern Cauca region specifically has seen an increase in concentrated coca cultivation, Lapaque said Friday, implying that illegal armed groups have been accumulating territory for the large-scale production of cocaine.

The local indigenous historically used coca leaf to chew on or for tea, but are fiercely opposed to drug trafficking or outsiders invading their territory.

According to the CRIC, “the indigenous authorities and guards in the north of Cauca, as well as the farming communities who seek the well-being of Colombian society” have increasingly become victim of “continuous and systematic threats.”

The leaders of ethnic minorities and the indigenous guards have also suffered a sharp increase in assassination attempts.

The latest victim, indigenous guard Gersain Yatacue, was assassinated inside indigenous territory in Toribio, a town bordering northern Cauca, on Thursday.

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