Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman was
dead Thursday. Now he's not.
The Mexican drug boss apparently is
alive and well, and probably laughing at thousands of Twitter users and even
government officials who reported otherwise.
He was never really
dead, or even in peril, but the rumors of his demise started slowly
on Thursday thanks to journalists in Guatemala and Mexico.
An email exchange about an incident in
the remote jungle region of El Peten that might have involved El Chapo
began to permeate diplomatic circles.
The Interior Minister of Guatemala told
journalists that a firefight between drug dealers and the military had resulted
in the death of two suspected criminals.
"Two died. One of the deceased is
physically very similar to El Chapo."
Cue the Twitter reports of El Chapo's
death, spreading like wildfire.
Guatemalan newspaper Prensa Libre
said at that point of the night, the government was getting ready to conduct
forensics tests to identify the two corpses.
Yet later on the same night, Guatemalan
officials said they weren't even sure that the supposed gunfight against the
drug dealers had even occurred.
Officials also said that military units
were patrolling the area to see if they could find any signs of a gun battle
between the army and drug traffickers.
They did not.
On Monday morning, after no El Chapo had
been found, Lopez apologized for the government's blunder on local radio
station Emisoras Unidas.
He said confusion arose because of
over-reliance on testimonies of local villagers, who said that they had seen a
clash between the army and drug traffickers.
He said too many
"contradictory" pieces of information came to officials at once, but
Ioan Grillo, a journalist and drug war analyst, had another theory:
"My reading of Chapo Guzman drama:
a snitch called and said Chapo died in firefight," Grillo tweeted.
"Guatemala pleased with news tells before confirming."
Whatever happened, with regards to this
most recent case, there is some reason to believe that El Chapo Guzman is in
Guatemala at this time.
WikiLeaks suggests that El Chapo is
hiding in El Peten, where Mexican cartels have managed to gain a stronghold
over drug trafficking routes.
Previously US DEA officials have
suggested that El Chapo hides in a mountain range in western Mexico that
straddles the states of Durango and Sinaloa.
Stay tuned ... and stay off Twitter for
news.
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