The article written by Samantha Lee, Amanda Macias and Christopher Woody and published by Business Insider, did comparism between two of the world’s powerful and dangerous drug lords. Below is the transcript of the article as published on the headline: How 2 of the world’s most powerful and dangerous drug lords compare.
Since
the late 1970s, two men have emerged as the most powerful and most dangerous
drug lords in the world.
Pablo Escobar, a farmer's son from
rural Colombia, and Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán, a product of Mexico's
rugged Sierra Madre Mountains, have delivered immeasurable amounts of cocaine
and other drugs to the world during their respective reigns.
In doing so, they've amassed
obscene amounts of wealth — and exposed the world to unimaginable levels of
terror.
While a direct comparison of
Escobar's Medellin cartel and Guzmán's Sinaloa Federation is difficult —
they've dealt with different products, different competition, and different
markets — looking at the two groups' leaders side by side gives some idea of their
power and influence.
Pablo Escobar
Pablo Escobar
Born to a humble farming family
near the city of Medellín in north-central Colombia, Pablo Escobar started his
career committing various petty crimes. He graduated to smuggling
thereafter and soon began carting shipments of marijuana.
By the late 1970s, he and several
associates had begun trafficking cocaine out of Colombia (which remains one of
themain cocaine producers in the world) and, by the early 1980s,
their Medellín cartel was shipping hundreds of millions of dollars' worth of
cocaine north to the voracious US market.
Pablo Escobar with his son, posing in front of the White House in 1981 |
While Escobar's income and wealth are hard to measure, it's believed that he was raking in $420 million a week by the mid-1980s, which would amount to roughly $22 billion a year. By the end of that decade, he was supplying 80% of the world's cocaine — and smuggling 15 tons of it into the US every day
He spent lavishly on himself and his family and was also a patron of local causes — building apartments, soccer fields, and handing out cash to the poor. These acts of charity won him popular support and bolstered his image as a man of the people.
"Pablo was earning so much
that each year we would write off 10% of the money because the rats would eat
it in storage or it would be damaged by water or lost," Escobar's brother,
Roberto, wrote in a 2009 book.
Escobar's illicit empire attracted
the attention of the Colombian government, which attempted to shut his
operations down. Clashes between the government and drug traffickers unleashed
a years-long wave of violence on Colombia.
The Colombian government, with US
assistance, deployed a special force to bring him down (though that force was badly bloodied in their first encounter with the
cartel). By mid-1991, the government's campaign forced Escobar to concede, and
he negotiated an agreement that allowed him to lock himself up in a jail of his own design in the highlands near Medellin.
By mid-1992, evidence that Escobar
was conducting cartel activity from his prison compelled the government to try
to apprehend him; instead, Escobar fled the prison and went on the run.
During this time, he and his
family traveled from hideout to hideout, never staying in the same place for
more than two days. At one point, Escobar torched $2 million in cash to
help his family stave off cold weather.
Guzmán after his February 2014 arrest. |
When they burst through the door,
Escobar scrambled out onto the rooftop. Like many of the details of his life, it remains unclear who fired the
shot that killed the
most powerful — and most dangerous — drug lord in the world.
Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán
While Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán is
not the first drug baron to emerge from the Sierra Madre Mountains of the
Sinaloa state in northwestern Mexico, the state’s namesake cartel rose to
global standing under his watch.
As the head of the Sinaloa cartel,
Guzmán oversees marijuana
and poppy cultivation that covers more than 23,000 miles within Mexico, an area
larger than Costa Rica, as well as a network that
has operatives in 17 of Mexico’s 32 states and reportedly operates in
nearly 50 countries, including an extensive network in the US.
The cartel is believed to control 35% of
the cocaine produced in Colombia (the world’s largest producer of the drug)
and, according to the DEA, in 2013 it supplied “80%
of the heroin, cocaine, marijuana and methamphetamine” flowing to the Chicago
region of the US each year.
The Sinaloa cartel is also
believed to have an immense international footprint. Cartel activity has been reported in Australia, Hong Kong, and the
Philippines in recent years.
And, according to the UN Office
on Drugs and Crime, Latin American organizations like Sinaloa are looking
toexpand their operations into new markets, using trafficking
routes through Africa and Asia.
“El Chapo” is no stranger to law
enforcement, either. In 1993, not long after he ascended to Sinaloa’s upper
ranks, Guzmán was arrested in Guatemala — where he had fled after a
cartel shootout in Guadalajara killed a Catholic Cardinal — and
locked up in a Mexican prison. There he stayed until 2001, when he escaped,
reportedly by hiding in a laundry cart.
He was on the run for 13 years
before he was caught in Mazatlan, on the Sinaloa coast, in February 2014.
Seventeen months later (a period of incarceration that didn’t interrupt his managerial duties), he escaped
again in spectacular fashion.
After six months on the run, Guzmán was recaptured in early
January in Los Mochis,
a city in Sinaloa state, not far from where he was born. The drama around him
has not slacked since he was rejailed.
His legal team has filed multiple
appeals to his sentence, and Guzmán himself has reportedly made overtures aboutcutting a deal with US authorities.
His wife has taken to the airwaves to decry his treatment in jail.
Amid the legal wrangling, worries
about another escape persist. In early May,Guzmán was shuttled from his cell at a prison in central
Mexico to another facility outside of Ciudad Juarez.
El Chapo's mother, Consuelo Loera. |
The Mexican government approved Guzmán's extradition to US courts in Texas and California
in late May, and his lawyers have responded with more appeals.
Guzmán remains locked up, where he
is presumably safe, though that may not be the case for his associates at home
in Sinaloa.
In mid-June, scores of armed men
descended on Guzmán's mother's home in central Sinaloa state. The attack left
several people dead, and may have been launched by a cartel with which Sinaloa has long feuded.
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