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Amenazas al Grupo Bimbo en Apatzingán, revela la revista Forbes

La periodista Dolia Estévez, colaboradora de la prestigiada revista Forbes y corresponsal del noticiero de MVS Noticias, que conduce Carmen Aristegui, denuncia en su colaboración de este jueves que la empresa Bimbo, en sus instalaciones en Apatzinán, ha recibido amenazas por parte de la organización Los Caballeros Templarios.

El Grupo Bimbo, de la familia Servitje,  ha sido amenzado con quemarle sus unidades automotricez que distribuyen sus diferentes productos.

La tierra caliente de Michoacán, y en general toda la entidad, ha sido señalada por el Procurador General de la República, Jesús Murillo Karan como la zona de más inseguridad en la República Mexicana. Desde hace 14 meses una ola de violencia azota al Estado de Michoacán y ante la ausencia del mandatario Fausto Vallejo y las malas designaciones en su gabinete de seguridad (de muy bajo perfil), la anarquía priva y la ciudadanía se encuentra temerosa.

A continuación texto íntegro de Dolia Estèvez, publicado este jueves en la revista Forbez:

Dolia Estévez/Forbes

18 de abril 2013

The billionaire Servitje family of Mexico, led by Roberto Servitje, owns Grupo Bimbo, Mexico’s largest bakery company, with household brands including Nutella and Sara Lee sold throughout the Americas, Europe, and Asia. Grupo Bimbo is being threatened by the criminal group Los Caballeros Templarios (The Knights Templar). The organization, a savage cartel that operates in the drug-plagued Mexican state of Michoacán,  has threatened to burn trucks owned by Bimbo, Marinela (the pastries division of GrupoBimbo),  Barcel (a Bimbo unit that makes tortillas, potato chips and snacks) and Sabritas (a Pepsi-Cola subsidiary that makes snacks),  if they distribute their products during the next three weeks in the state’s Apatzingán region,  Mexico City’s leading daily, Reforma, reported on April 17.

Located in Western Mexico, the state of Michoacán has seen more than its share of violence in recent years as rival drug cartels fight for control of the state’s Pacific ports and clashes between gunmen and federal police have intensified.  In March, authorities found bodies of seven men tied up in plastic chairs placed along the side of a street.

“Beginning this week we are telling you that you are banned from supplying your products in the towns of Buenavista, La Ruana and Tepalcatepec, Michoacán. If you are found distributing in these places your trucks will be burned down,” the group threatened in a flyer also posted on social media sites. They didn’t give a reason for their threats, but in May of 2012, the organization’s armed commandos set fire to Sabritas facilities in Michoacán and the neighboring state of Guanajuato, alleging that Sabritas lent trucks to the Mexican Army to carry out “undercover operations” against them.

Carlos Galvez, President of Michoacán’s Business Council, said that the Council was concerned with the threats and asked the state and federal governments to take them seriously and strengthen security in the state. Galvez called on law-enforcement authorities to investigate the threats and keep them informed.

For the past six years,  the Washington-backed  war on drugs waged by former President Felipe Calderon, a Michoacán native, caused an unprecedented surge in violence:  70,000 people have died in drug-related violence and 26,000 have gone missing from 2006 to 2012.  The violence did not stop with the inauguration of President Enrique Peña Nieto in December 2012. During the first 100 days of his Administration,  2,882 people were killed in Mexico, 41 of them in Michoacán, according to Reforma’s “ejecutómetro” (a homicide barometer used to count drug-related deaths in Mexico.)

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