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 Campeche. Camp.- El gobernador Fernando Ortega Bernés negó “categórico” haber asistido al presunto cónclave que, según el periodista estadunidense Wayne Madsen, sostuvo un grupo de mandatarios estatales con Joaquín El Chapo Guzmán en un lujoso hotel de Mazatlán, Sinaloa, en 2011.

En la investigación, que fue difundida en el sitio Infowars.com y reproducida por varios medios nacionales y locales, Madsen revela que la presunta reunión de integrantes de la Conferencia Nacional de Gobernadores (Conago) con el poderoso narcotraficante tuvo lugar en el hotel Pueblo Bonio Emerald Bay, a finales de junio de 2011.

03_03_02_536_Carlos Lozano y Miguel Alonso se reunieron conSegún el reportaje, a la encerrona asistieron Mario López Valdez, gobernador de Sinaloa; Carlos Lozano de la Torre, de Aguascalientes; Marcos Alberto Covarrubias Villaseñor, de Baja California Sur; Fernando Ortega Bernés, de Campeche; César Duarte Jáquez, de Chihuahua; Mario Anguiano Moreno, de Colima; Jorge Herrera Caldera, de Durango, y Ángel Aguirre Rivero, exmandatario de Guerrero.

También José Francisco Olvera Ruiz, de Hidalgo; Rodrigo Medina, de Nuevo León; Gabino Cué, de Oaxaca; Rafael Moreno Valle, de Puebla; José Eduardo Calzada Rovirosa, de Querétaro; Roberto Borge Angulo, de Quintana Roo, y Fernando Toranzo Fernández, de San Luis Potosí.

Además, Guillermo Padrés Elías, de Sonora; Egidio Torre Cantú, de Tamaulipas, Mariano González Zarur, de Tlaxcala; Javier Duarte, de Veracruz, y Miguel Alonso Reyes, de Zacatecas.

Aunque el viernes pasado se acogió a su “derecho a no declarar” para eludir los cuestionamientos, hoy, presionado por los partidos Morena y Movimiento Ciudadano (MC) que le exigieron una explicación a esas acusaciones, “que no son cosa menor”, Ortega Bernés negó la veracidad de la versión, la cual, aseguró, carece de fundamentos.

03_03_03_536_Carlos Lozano y Miguel Alonso se reunieron con“Se habla efectivamente en esa nota, que ha sido reproducida por varios medios locales y nacionales, de una reunión que desde luego nunca existió, categóricamente lo afirmo, y seguramente no descarto que la Conago en su momento haga algún pronunciamiento al respecto”, dijo.

“Me parece, lo reitero, que la Conago seguramente en su momento habrá de hacer y de fijar un posicionamiento al respecto, porque me consta que todos los gobernadores en forma unánime estamos preocupados por este tipo de señalamientos que con gran facilidad alguien puede formular”, recalcó.

“Y enfáticamente lo señalo: que no solamente es en mi caso, sino que estoy absolutamente convencido de que nunca hay que aprovechar circunstancias difíciles como las que hay para construir historias sin fundamento”, atajó Ortega Bernés.

 

Aquí la nota de Wayne Madsen del sitio www.inforwars.com

El Capo Chapo Guzmán escapó con ayuda del Gobierno Mexicano

 

Joaquin Guzman Loera, also known as “El Chapo” (“Shorty”), the feared and elusive chieftain of the Mexican Sinaloa narcotics cartel, was a guest of honor at the 2011 Mexican state governors’ conference held in Mazatlan, according to a well-placed source who contacted the Wayne Madsen Report.

On July 11, 2015, the drug kingpin escaped for the second time from Altiplano prison, a supposedly maximum-security facility located west of Mexico City. El Chapo’s escape came 13 years after he escaped from another maximum security prison, Puente Grande, in Jalisco state. In both cases, El Chapo had help from the inside.

When El Chapo was incarcerated at Puente Grande, he was actually using the prison to run his worldwide drug trafficking empire. The entire prison staff was on El Chapo’s payroll and his easy escape in 2001 was reportedly arranged by then-President Vicente Fox in exchange for a hefty bribe.

WMR’s source, who was visiting the posh Pueblo Bonito Emerald Bay resort in Mazatlan, stated that in late June, 2011 guests of the hotel arrived to find Federal police armed with AK-47 assault rifles and black Humvees ringing the grounds and the entrance gate. The police checked all who entered the hotel. Upon entering the lobby, our source noticed a large group of distinguished looking men in suits with one of them, a tall and menacing-looking man, clearly the center of attention.

The man who was attracting all of the attention was the governor of Sinaloa state, Mario López Valdez of the National Action Party (PAN). Ironically, the man who Lopez Valdez defeated in 2010, Jesus Vizcarra Calderon of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), was linked to the Sinaloa Cartel, particularly Ismael Zambada García, who is on the FBI’s “Most Wanted List” and runs Sinaloa drug smuggling operations in Sinaloa and Durango in western Mexico, in addition to Quintana Roo and Cancun on the east coast and Nuevo Leon in the northeast, near Texas.

Wayne Madsen is an investigative journalist who consistently exposes cover-ups from deep within government. Want to be the first to learn the latest scandal? Click on the banner above and subscribe today!

Sinaloa, where Mazatlan is located, is El Chapo’s home turf. Our source also noticed that a Mexican Navy warship was anchored just offshore from the hotel. It turns out our source walked right into a meeting of the Mexican state governors. Photographs were not permitted in the hotel during the governors’ conference. One of the reasons for the no photo policy was the alleged presence of one guest who our source spotted among the governors. Sitting poolside at the hotel was none other than Joaquin Guzman Loera, the feared El Chapo. Our source, who did not know at first who the man was, claimed that El Chapo was the perfect gentleman and very friendly. El Chapo stated to our source that he had business dealings in Houston and owned a house in Texas.

In addition to rubbing shoulders with the governor of Sinaloa, El Chapo spent his time at the Mazatlan conference with other current incumbent Mexican state governors, including Carlos Lozano de la Torre of Aguascalientes, Marcos Alberto Covarrubias Villaseñor of Baja California Sur, Fernando Ortega Bernés of Campeche, Cesar Horacio Duarte Jaquez of Chihuahua, Mario Anguiano Moreno of Colima, Jorge Herrera Caldera of Durango, Ángel Heladio Aguirre Rivero of Guerrero, José Francisco Olvera Ruiz of Hidalgo, Rodrigo Medina de la Cruz of Nuevo Leon, Gabino Cué Monteagudo of Oaxaca, Rafael Moreno Valle Rosas of Puebla, José Eduardo Calzada Roviros of Queretaro, Roberto Borge Angulo of Quintana Roo, Fernando Toranzo Fernández of San Luis Potosi, Guillermo Padrés Elías of Sonora, Egidio Torre Cantú of Tamaulipas, Mariano González Zarur of Tlaxcala, Javier Duarte de Ochoa of Veracruz, and Miguel Alejandro Alonso Reyes of Zacatecas.

Oddly, the website of the Conferencia Nacional de Gobernadores (CONAGO) states that only two governors’ conferences were held in 2011, one in Monterrey on May 27, 2011 and another on December 6, 2011 in Mexico City. There is no mention of an official conference being held in Mazatlan in June of that year. However, during the previous year, 2010, three governors’ conferences were officially held in March in Morelia, in June in Ciudad Victoria, and November in Veracruz. In 2013, there was a CONAGO conference in Mazatlan. The venues were shared between the Pueblo Bonito Emerald Bay resort and the Mazatlan International Center. The 2011 governors’ conclave in Mazatlan appears to have been off-the-record as far as CONAGO is concerned.

Our source claimed that conversations with those attending the conference revealed that many of the governors appreciated the money that the Sinaloa Cartel chieftain keeps in circulation in their states. For tourist magnet states like Sinaloa, Cancun, Quintana Roo, Campeche, Baja California Sur, Baja California, and Veracruz, El Chapo’s drug proceeds have built a number of swank hotels and posh resorts that have brought even more money into these states from abroad.

Noticiero El Circo