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Being a nurse is a dangerous job in Juarez with the narco wars going on.

The Mexican border town of Ciudad Juarez was labeled Mexico's deadliest city, at the center of a war on drug cartels. While murder rates have slowed, death is still a daily fact of life for nurses there, who have also found themselves to be targets.British emergency nurse Maria Connolly leaves the A&E department of the Royal Preston Hospital to work in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico - the center of a violent drug war. In Preston, Maria has never seen a murder victim or anyone with a gunshot injury, but Juarez is the murder capital of the world and the nurses in the General Hospital deal with the victims of shootings, stabbings and torture on a daily basis.

For Maria this is a journey into the lives of a dedicated team of nurses who are themselves targets for kidnappers and killers, often having to conceal their identities and change their routes to work. In recent years Ciudad Juarez has had more violent deaths than Baghdad - since 2008 more than 10,000 people have died on the streets, victims of a vicious turf war between the drug cartels battling to control the lucrative marijuana and cocaine trade over the border into America.

Maria's host for her stay is local nurse Pablo Vasquez who has witnessed gun battles in the hospital itself. Now heavily-armed guards patrol the corridors. She also meets one of Pablo's neighbours, whose daughter is one of the hundreds of young women who have simply disappeared from the streets of the city.

During her stay Maria treats patients with a terrifying variety of violent injuries. She sees gunshot injuries, stabbings, beatings and even a father and son who were put through a mock execution. But the nurses of Juarez General work through the mayhem with dedication and humour, in the face of the world's most notorious drug war.
Auxiliary nurse Pablo Vasquez has been working the night shift in A&E at Juarez General for six years."Every day I change my route to avoid unwanted attention. If they see us in our uniforms it make us targets of violence and kidnapping."


Working nights means leaving the house in darkness, the most dangerous time in the city. "A year and a half ago a fellow nurse was kidnapped so now I'm always extra careful," he says.
"When we park at the hospital we have to check all around before we leave the car."

Doctors and nurses are seen as wealthy and are a prime target for kidnappers in Juarez. Many have been held for ransom and even murdered.

Since the war on the drug cartels was launched by President Calderon in 2006, hundreds of medical staff have fled the city, leaving more than a third of the clinics and hospitals abandoned.

Thousands of troops and Federal police have attempted to crush the cartels, but violence erupted along the border and in Juarez it led to a three-way war between rival cartels and the authorities.

More than 8,000 men, women, and children have been killed in drug-related violence since the crackdown began.

Pablo admits it is not just his own safety he has to worry about - he lives in constant fear for his children. A family picnic means constantly monitoring who is around them.

And he is particularly worried about his daughters.

Over the past two decades, hundreds of women have gone missing in the city - some murdered, others never found.

"Almost everyone is touched by this situation," says Pablo. "Maybe not in your own family but your neighbours or someone you know has been affected."

A daughter of his neighbour went out to find work and never came back.

"They're women who work - students, prostitutes, factory workers, shop workers. Anybody," he says.

They say they are investigating - but how come no one is ever arrested?"

It is estimated that 96% of all murders in Juarez go unsolved.

Head Sister Trine De La Cruz, who works with Vasquez, was so concerned about her family's safety that she moved them to the US where they have dual nationality.

They made the decision when their upmarket neighbourhood was taken over by gangs and they were caught in a gunfight.

Trine's husband, son and daughter now live with relatives just over the border on the outskirts of El Paso, one of the safest places to live in the US. In 2010 there were five murders in El Paso - and 3,075 in Juarez.But Trine admits she feels guilty about staying behind to work.

"I have thought about leaving but this is my job. I've been a nurse for 21 years and to leave my job because of what is happening here, I don't think that's the right thing to do."

She also protects her identity at work, wearing a mask and covering her name badge when she treats patients brought in by police to their prison ward.
Medical transport is no garantee against violence.
Gumen attacked this abulance and killed everyone inside

The hospital is patrolled 24 hours a day by heavily armed guards, after violence spilled over into the wards.

"When the violence started, some gunmen came in to take a patient away," says Pablo. "There were six of them, with pistols and rifles. I just ran away, I hid under the desk."

British emergency nurse Maria Connolly was astounded when he told her this story. She visited the hospital for a BBC documentary, spending two weeks experiencing life as a nurse.

It seemed like another world to Maria and the A&E department of the Royal Preston Hospital where she works.

"I think we'd be offered counselling if someone shouted in our face, but that? We'd shut the department you know, people wouldn't come back to work."

The first patient she helped treat was typical of many - he had no identification and had been found on the street unconscious. They were unable to save him, but with the hospital morgue full and another emergency arriving, the dead man had to be moved out of the hospital's only resuscitation bed.

In her two weeks in the hospital, she encountered patients with a range of violent injuries.

One teenage girl was shot through the neck for refusing to join a gang. Her friend was killed.

Maria spoke to one man who was kidnapped with his son and set on fire - all due to mistaken identity. "If that happened in our department it would have been news - it would have been the first thing someone had said... this is normal I guess, it's crazy.

"I've been shocked by what I've seen. The numbers of people coming in who have been involved in violent attacks and there are so many that don't come to A&E as well - the people who are killed every night."

But after returning to the UK, it was the dedication of the nurses that stayed with her the most.

"When I was in Juarez if someone said 'would you stay or would you want to move out?' I remember thinking there's no way I'd stay. And since I've come home, I've just reflected on how dedicated they are.

"It renewed my belief in nursing and how important it is - I'd forgotten a bit of that."
Source:BBC


Added: Aug-31-2012 
By: Bthor420
In:
Regional News
Tags: Narco War, Mexico, Drugs, Violence,
Location: Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua, Mexico (load item map)
Marked as: approved
Views: 8684 | Comments: 31 | Votes: 0 | Favorites: 0 | Shared: 60 | Updates: 0 | Times used in channels: 2
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  • It is very sad that public safety is non-existent even in large cities. The war on drugs did not work well at all. The only thing this 'war' has done is to make a few people very rich and powerful beyond the resources of the government. People compare this to a war but I feel it is much worse since the combatants to not use any rule of war and will murder anyone using any means. At least soldiers in a real war have rules to abide by.

    Posted Aug-31-2012 By 

    (1)

  • The Mexican government is fucking retarded. They should have declared marshal law there years ago and cleaned out this cesspool.

    Posted Aug-31-2012 By 

    (0)

    • @dorbie

      Most the govermeng are in on it and make profit from it, so they don't want it to stop. They ACT like they do, but they are getting rich off this also.

      Posted Aug-31-2012 By 

      (3)

  • I would rather take a stroll down main street in Damascus than step foot in that shithole Mexico. They'll skin you alive down there.

    Posted Aug-31-2012 By 

    (0)

  • Mexico is a toxic waist dump

    Posted Aug-31-2012 By 

    (0)

  • Just say " sorry, no speaky espaniol"!

    Posted Aug-31-2012 By 

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  • Nurses put themselves in harms way everyday ,they are real heros but people call a guy who got paid to go the moon a hero.

    Posted Aug-31-2012 By 

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  • Dangerous as hell, I salute 'em for their bravery.

    Posted Aug-31-2012 By 

    (0)

  • these doctors and nurses are hero's for sure,,,,in columbia they took their country back by any means.they took the fight to the drug families,time to take out the trash if its not to late,,Black Water comes to mind ,

    Posted Aug-31-2012 By 

    (0)

    • @outsidelooknn

      Columbia is still one dangerous country and still the second biggest producer of cocaine only next to Peru. Medellin and Cali are still constantly ranked In top 20 most dangerous cities. It is most def. way better than it was, but its farrrrrrr from safe. I have a couple friends who live in Colombia and they tell me stories....they still have the FARC kidnapping folks as well.

      Posted Aug-31-2012 By 

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    • @Bthor420 can only hope its getting better then,i thought they had it under some control,

      Posted Aug-31-2012 By 

      (1)

    • @outsidelooknn

      It's most def. significantly better than it was in the 80's and 90's, but it's still not a place as gringo you would want to wonder around without the "right people". They still have the paramillitary death squads, FARC rebels, drug cartels, and street gangsters. So it's better, but it's far from safe/good. But they are def. making progress.

      Posted Aug-31-2012 By 

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  • No job worth the money in mexico.

    Posted Aug-31-2012 By 

    (0)

  • Dont they have a code of honor? You dont touch nurses, doctors and firefighters because one day they might save your life.

    Posted Aug-31-2012 By 

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    • @no compromise truth

      Dude, you're talking about a place where if they can't get you, they will torture your kids and family, so no, there is absolutely no honor among these guys.

      Posted Aug-31-2012 By 

      (1)

    • @Bthor420

      Sickos salivate at the thought of watching humans suffer at their hands. Chainsawing two men on video..one can imagine the hell they put people through before allowing them to die.. so much of it never on video.. really just blows my mind how sick these fcuks are.

      Posted Aug-31-2012 By 

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    • @no2cents

      Yea, it really is mind boggling....they seem more like sick sadistic serial killers, just using the cartel as an excuse to kill....I keep up with the narco war quite a bit and have many books on it, and it's not uncommon for certain Hitman to have many hundreds of actual kills they were a part of. And I don't mean just ordering them, because if that's the case, you got people in the thousands and thousands of murders under their belt. Plus, the "official" number for murder More..

      Posted Aug-31-2012 By 

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    • @Bthor420 can you recommend a good book that gives insight on the doings of these cartels? Like how they are organised, how they make their money, why it comes to cartel wars?

      Posted Aug-31-2012 By 

      (1)

    • @no compromise truth

      The newest one that I am reading right now just came out and it's called "The Executioners Men" and it's entirely about the Zetas....how they came about, there criminal activities, it even names all the boss's of each plaza, and has a bunch of stories. Its a GREAT book! I'll go look through my books and send you a few more names a a couple minutes

      Posted Aug-31-2012 By 

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  • Drug wars no doubt, but i bet a lot of psychopaths getting away with their shit, as they realize cops are too overwhelmed to investigate. Heart wrenching for two daughters to go missing like that.
    What a sick sick hell hole.

    Posted Aug-31-2012 By 

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    • @no2cents
      Juarez is know as the city of missing women. Thousands of women are just missi from that city, and a lot of people think the same thing you do. But you also have to figure that these kids raised in this are going to use viollence as a means to settle anything, small or big. It's all they know, so it's ignorant of people to call al the killings "drug related" because that's not the case. Juarez has become a paranoid and violent city in general.....although it is ultimately f More..

      Posted Aug-31-2012 By 

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  • Mexico can go to hell, they hate their country, run up here to the USA, and then bitch and bitch and bitch about us, but, NEVER the country they RAN away from. We (the tax payers) are the bad guys and Mexican, invaders, (that have NEVER paid a USA tax in their life) are the good guys. Funny how you can invade and country and think you are the GOOD guys.

    FUCK MEXICO
    or
    Messico!

    Posted Aug-31-2012 By 

    (0)

  • I think the article above gives pretty sound reasons to the US Government to go and seek Saddam's WMD in Mexico.

    Posted Aug-31-2012 By 

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