Guerrilla
group claims Pemex bombings
By
María Antonieta Uribe and Héctor Tobar
Los Angeles Times
MALTRATA,
MEXICO
Petroleumworld.com
09 13 07
A leftist guerrilla group claimed
credit Tuesday for the bombing attacks a day earlier of
six Pemex pipelines in central Mexico, as officials conceded
it was impossible for police and army troops to protect
the company's vast fuel-distribution network.
The
Popular Revolutionary Army, known by the initials EPR
in Spanish, said 12 of its "military units" had
undertaken the attacks in Veracruz and Tlaxcala states
to force the government to hand over two EPR militants
who disappeared this year. The EPR says the men were arrested
in Oaxaca, but officials there deny they detained them.
On Tuesday, Petroleos Mexicanos, or Pemex, officials said
the attacks had caused a 25% drop in the supply of natural
gas available to consumers across Mexico. At least 10 states
reported natural gas shortages. Several factories remained
closed for lack of fuel, including the Volkswagen plant
in Puebla.
Fires set off at the bombed pipelines were largely contained
Tuesday. But Pemex officials said it may take days to repair
the severed lines.
Coming two months after similar attacks in the states
of Guanajuato and Queretaro, the bombings were a blow to
the government of Felipe Calderon, who has made security
a centerpiece of his presidency.
In Maltrata, a town of about 15,000 in Veracruz state,
most residents returned home a day after explosions at
a concrete Pemex structure less than a mile outside the
town limits. The small building contained a valve station
linked to three lines that carried gasoline and natural
gas. The town sits in a small valley and many residents
fled to the surrounding hillsides in the midst of a heavy
rainstorm.
"At about 2 a.m., the ground shook, and we heard
a thunder clap," said resident Genaro Marcelino. "We
grabbed what we could, ran out of the house and into the
hills. It was raining cats and dogs. We saw the sky light
up."
Authorities said no one was injured in the blasts. Maltrata
residents said only one person lived near the exploded
building: a squatter who mysteriously moved out of his
shack a day before it was singed by the explosion.
"This time we all lived to tell the tale, but next
time, who knows," said Delia Vera, a fruit vendor.
Like others here, she expressed frustration with both the
guerrillas and the government. "Let Calderon work
out his things, and not get us mixed up in his problems."
A few
residents were too afraid to return to their homes and
spent another night in emergency shelters. "It
was frightening," said 13-year-old Gerardo Grande
Dominguez. "All I saw was the sky turn orange."
Officials
said the method employed in the attack was similar to
July bombings for which EPR claimed responsibility.
Monday's devices used shaped plastic explosives, known
as "sausage" bombs, and were detonated remotely
by cellphones.
On
Monday, one bomb was discovered intact, with a message
attached. "Alive you took them, alive we want them
back," the note read, in an apparent reference to
the missing militants.
Local
news reported that army troops had been briefly posted
to the Maltrata pipelines after the July attacks.
An army bomb squad surveyed several miles of the line near
Maltrata after an anonymous threat on July 18 but declared
the incident a "false alarm."
Pemex general director Jesus Reyes Heroles said Tuesday
that the state-owned distribution network, which includes
30,000 miles of pipelines, was simply too large to guard
completely.
"To think that we can protect with private guards
or armed forces, is impossible," he told reporters.
Others say the attacks point to failures in Mexico's intelligence
agencies, which have been humbled by a relatively small
group of rebels, many of whom are well known by authorities.
The EPR was founded in the Pacific state of Guerrero in
the mid-1990s but has split into half a dozen groups. The
core of the EPR group linked to the pipeline attacks is
made up of five extended families based in the southern
state of Oaxaca, according to a military intelligence report
obtained by the newspaper El Universal in July.
The
report identifies one leader as Paulino Cruz Sanchez,
a man who also goes by the name Tiburcio Cruz Sanchez and
by the nicknames "the Professor" and "Pancho
Riatas."
Cruz
Sanchez is "an explosives expert with more than
four decades in the clandestine armed struggle," the
report says. His brother Gabriel Alberto Cruz Sanchez is
one of the two men whose release is demanded in EPR communiques.
Tuesday's
communique, sent to several Mexican newspapers, said
Calderon's government was waging a "dirty war" against
dissent.
hector.tobar@latimes.com
Uribe reported from Maltrata and Tobar from Mexico City.
Los
Angeles Times
September 12, 2007
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