Tag: Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG)

  • How Mexico Killed The Powerful Drug Kingpin ‘El Mencho’ and What It Means

    How Mexico Killed The Powerful Drug Kingpin ‘El Mencho’ and What It Means

    The Mexican army killed the country’s most powerful cartel leader and one of the United States’ most wanted fugitives on Sunday, notching a major victory while cartel members responded with a wave of violence across the country.

    The killing of Jalisco New Generation Cartel leader Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes during an attempt to capture him in Jalisco state was the highest-profile blow against cartels since the recapture of former Sinaloa cartel boss Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzman a decade ago.

    Following Oseguera Cervantes’ death, gunmen unleashed violence across the country. Cars burned out by cartel members blocked roads in 20 Mexican states and left smoke billowing into the air. People locked themselves in their homes in Guadalajara, Mexico’s second-largest city and Jalisco’s capital, and school was canceled Monday in several states as security forces were placed on alert all over the country. Even Guatemala reinforced security on its border with Mexico.

    The killing could give the government a leg up in its dealings with the US Trump administration, which has been threatening tariffs or unilateral military action if Mexico does not show results in the fight against the cartels.

    But the long-term effect on Mexico’s security landscape remains unclear.

    Here’s what to know:

    Oseguera Cervantes, better known as “El Mencho,” was 59 years old and originally from the western state of Michoacan. His ties to organised crime went back at least three decades.

    In 1994, he was tried for trafficking heroin in the US and sent to prison for three years. Upon returning to Mexico, he quickly rose through Mexico’s drug trafficking underworld.

    Around 2009, he founded the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, which became Mexico’s fastest-growing criminal organisation, moving cocaine, methamphetamines, fentanyl and migrants to the United States, and innovating in violence with the use of drones and improvised explosive devices.

    The cartel earned a reputation for brazen attacks on Mexican security forces, including downing a military helicopter in Jalisco in 2015 and attempting a spectacular, but unsuccessful, assassination of Mexico City Police Chief Omar Garcia Harfuch, who is now Mexico’s federal security secretary.

    It recruited aggressively, experimenting with new ways to reach potential members online, and generated revenue through fuel theft, extortion and timeshare fraud, among other activities.

    Oseguera Cervantes was killed during an attempt to capture him, as his followers attempted to fight off Mexican troops.

    Mexico’s Defense Department said in a statement that the army launched an operation in the southern part of Jalisco state to capture Oseguera Cervantes, involving the Mexican Air Force and special forces.

    The cartel counterattacked, and in the ensuing confrontation, federal forces killed four members of the criminal group, and wounded three others, including its leader, who died later during transfer by air to Mexico City, according to the statement.

    Three soldiers were injured and two people were detained in the action. Rocket launchers capable of shooting down aircraft and destroying armored vehicles were seized at the scene.

    Oseguera Cervantes’ will help Mexico’s government show results to the US, which is pressuring its neighbour to pursue drug cartels more aggressively. Both countries said intelligence collaboration helped lead to Sunday’s operation.

    Oseguera Cervantes was facing multiple indictments in the United States and the US State Department had offered a $15 million reward for information leading to his arrest. The Trump administration designated his cartel and others foreign terrorist organisations a year ago.

    US Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau, who was US ambassador to Mexico during the first Trump administration, applauded the operation via X, writing “The good guys are stronger than the bad guys. Congratulations to the forces of law and order in the great Mexican nation.”

    Mike Vigil, former chief of international operations for the DEA, said Mexico had sent a “a strong message to Donald Trump’s administration that they are fighting aggressively and effectively” against the most powerful cartels. He added that “the majority of the information came from the Mexican armed forces and all credit goes to Mexico”.

    It’s not clear who will succeed Oseguera Cervantes, or if any one person can.

    The Jalisco cartel has a presence in at least 21 of Mexico’s 32 states and is active in almost all of the United States, according to the US Drug Enforcement Administration. But it is also a global organisation and the loss of its leader could be felt well beyond Mexico.

    “El Mencho controlled everything, he was like a country’s dictator,” Vigil said.

    His absence could slow the cartel’s rapid growth and expansion and leave it initially weakened against the Sinaloa cartel on several fronts where they or their proxies are fighting. The Sinaloa is locked in its own internal power struggle, however, between the sons of “El Chapo” and the faction loyal to Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada, who is in US custody.

    Vigil said Mexico should seize the moment to launch “an effective frontal assault based on intelligence”.

    “This is a big opportunity for Mexico and the United States if they work together,” he said.

    Security analyst David Saucedo said that if relatives of Oseguera Cervantes take control of the cartel, the violence seen Sunday could continue. If others take power, they could be more willing to turn the page and continue operations.

    The greatest fear would be that the cartel turns to indiscriminate violence. They could decide to “launch narcoterrorism attacks … and generate a scenario similar to what Colombia lived in the 1990s”, a full-on attack against the government “car bombs, assassinations and attacks on aircraft”.

    (FRANCE 24 with AP)

  • Inside Kenya’s Secret War With Mexican Drug Cartel

    Inside Kenya’s Secret War With Mexican Drug Cartel

    In the dusty borderlands of Namanga, where Kenya meets Tanzania, security forces have uncovered what may be one of the most significant transnational crime operations to ever penetrate East Africa.

    Behind the makeshift walls of what appeared to be an ordinary compound in Olelopo village, Mexican cartel operatives had established a sophisticated methamphetamine laboratory marking the Jalisco New Generation Cartel’s audacious attempt to expand its global empire into the heart of Africa.

    The Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG), led by the infamous Nemesio Oseguera Ramos known as “El Mencho” represents one of Mexico’s most ruthless criminal organizations.

    With a $10 million bounty on their leader’s head, this transnational syndicate has now set its sights on Kenya as a strategic hub for drug production and arms trafficking.

    The cartel’s East African operations came to light through a web of arrests and discoveries that paint a disturbing picture of how deeply foreign criminal enterprises have penetrated Kenya’s borders.

    At the center of this network sits Kenyan businessman Elisha Odhiambo Asumo, whose arrest in Morocco in April 2025 has exposed the intricate connections between local facilitators and international drug trafficking organizations.

    Court documents reveal that between 2022 and 2024, Asumo allegedly orchestrated a complex arms smuggling operation that would have supplied weapons to the Mexican cartel.

    His method was sophisticated: creating fraudulent end-user certificates including one purportedly issued by Tanzania to legitimize illegal arms shipments.

    The operation reached its crescendo in early 2023 when Asumo allegedly traveled to South Africa to meet with cartel representatives, finalizing logistics for what investigators describe as a significant arms deal.

    The businessman now faces two federal charges in the United States, each carrying potential life sentences: conspiracy to unlawfully import narcotics and conspiracy to possess firearms in furtherance of drug trafficking.

    The Namanga Laboratory Discovery

    The cartel’s ambitions extended beyond arms trafficking into drug manufacturing.

    In September 2024, Kenyan authorities discovered a makeshift methamphetamine laboratory in Namanga, operated under the supervision of Israel Alvarado Vera, a former Mexican police officer turned alleged CJNG operative.

    The laboratory was no amateur operation. Authorities confiscated industrial quantities of precursor chemicals including Methylamine, Phenylacetone, tartaric Acid, Sodium Hydroxide, Ethanol, Acetone, and Toluene the essential ingredients for large-scale methamphetamine production.

    The sophistication of the operation suggests significant investment and planning by the cartel.

    Vera, who initially fled after the laboratory’s discovery, was eventually captured alongside a Kenyan woman and two Nigerian nationals.

    Their arrest exposed a truly global network stretching across continents from Nigeria and South Africa to Gabon, Mexico, and Brazil.

    The fugitive network

    Perhaps most concerning for regional security is the revelation that the network’s leadership remains at large.

    Investigations have identified a key fugitive who investigators believe has fled to Uganda, potentially establishing new operational bases across East Africa’s porous borders.

    This development underscores a troubling reality: criminal organizations are exploiting East Africa’s strategic location and weak border controls to establish manufacturing and transit hubs for global drug trafficking.

    Kenya’s position as a regional hub for trade and transport makes it an attractive target for cartels seeking to expand their reach into European and Asian markets.

    The Mexican Embassy in Nairobi has maintained official silence on the cartel’s presence in Kenya, citing ongoing legal proceedings.

    In a carefully worded statement, embassy officials confirmed only that they are providing “consular assistance within the framework of the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations.”

    This diplomatic restraint highlights the delicate nature of international cooperation in combating transnational crime, particularly when it involves citizens of allied nations engaged in criminal activities far from home.

    The CJNG’s expansion into Kenya represents more than isolated criminal activity it signals a strategic shift in global drug trafficking patterns.

    As traditional routes through Mexico and Central America face increased scrutiny, cartels are diversifying their operations into regions with less developed counter-narcotics capabilities.

    For Kenya, this presents unprecedented challenges. The country must now contend not only with local crime but with the sophisticated methods and vast resources of international criminal organizations.

    The cartel’s use of legitimate business covers, fraudulent documentation, and corruption of officials demonstrates the multifaceted nature of this threat.

    Questions that remain

    Several critical questions emerge from this investigation:

    How many similar operations remain undetected across East Africa?

    The discovery of one laboratory suggests others may exist, hidden behind legitimate business fronts or in remote locations beyond regular surveillance.

    What role do corrupt officials play in facilitating these operations?

    The sophisticated nature of the arms trafficking scheme suggests possible official complicity or negligence in oversight mechanisms.

    How extensive is the cartel’s recruitment of local facilitators?

    Asumo’s alleged role indicates that criminal organizations are successfully identifying and cultivating local partners with the connections and knowledge necessary to operate within Kenya’s business and regulatory environment.

    Kenya’s battle against the CJNG infiltration requires a comprehensive response that goes beyond traditional law enforcement.

    Success will demand enhanced international cooperation, strengthened border controls, improved financial monitoring systems, and robust anti-corruption measures.

    The Namanga laboratory bust and related arrests represent significant victories, but they also reveal the scope of the challenge ahead.

    As criminal organizations become increasingly global in their operations, Kenya and its regional partners must develop equally sophisticated and coordinated responses.

    The stakes could not be higher. Failure to contain the cartel’s expansion risks transforming East Africa into a major hub for global drug trafficking, with all the violence, corruption, and social devastation that typically follows in its wake.

    This investigation is ongoing. The full extent of the CJNG’s operations in Kenya and the broader East African region continues to unfold as authorities work to dismantle what appears to be an extensive transnational criminal network.