Fourth murder in four days in Rosario keeps Argentine Prez Milei worried, Messi’s home town is now country’s drug paradise

Rosario (Argentina): The order to kill came from inside a federal prison near Argentina’s capital. Unwitting authorities patched a call from drug traffickers tied to one of the country’s most notorious gangs to collaborators on the outside. Hiring a 15-year-old hit man, they sealed the fate of a young father they didn’t even know.
At a service station on March 9 in Rosario, the picturesque hometown of soccer star Lionel Messi, 25-year-old employee Bruno Bussanich was whistling to himself and checking the day’s earnings just before he was shot three times from less than a foot away, surveillance footage shows. The assailant fled without taking a peso.
It was the fourth gang-related fatal shooting in Rosario in almost as many days. Authorities called it an unprecedented rampage in Argentina, which had never witnessed the extremes of drug cartel violence afflicting some other Latin American countries.
A handwritten letter was found near Bussanich’s body, addressed to officials who want to curb the power drug kingpins wield from behind bars. We don’t want to negotiate anything. We want our rights,” it says. “We will kill more innocent people.
Shaken residents interviewed by The Associated Press across Rosario described a sense of dread taking hold.

A challenge for populist President Javier Milei

Every time I go to work, I say goodbye to my father as if it were the last time, said 21-year-old Celeste Nunez, who also works at a gas station. The string of killings offer an early test to the security agenda of populist President Javier Milei, who has tethered his political success to saving Argentina’s tanking economy and eradicating narco-trafficking violence.
 Since taking office on December 10, the right-wing leader has promised to prosecute gang members as terrorists and change the law to allow the army into crime-ridden streets for the first time since Argentina’s brutal military dictatorship ended in 1983.
His law-and-order message has empowered the hardline governor of Santa Fe province, which includes Rosario, to clamp down on incarcerated criminal gangs that authorities say orchestrated 80 per cent of shootings last year.
 Under the orders of Governor Maximiliano Pullaro, police have ramped up prison raids, seized thousands of smuggled cellphones and restricted visits.
 We are facing a group of narco-terrorists desperate to maintain power and impunity, Milei said after Bussanich was killed, announcing the deployment of federal forces in Rosario. We will lock them up, isolate them, take back the streets.
 Milei won 56 per cent of the vote in Rosario, where residents praise his focus on a problem largely neglected by his predecessors. But some worry the government’s combative approach traps them in the line of fire.
 Gangs started their deadly retaliations just hours after Pullaro’s security minister shared photos showing Argentine prisoners crammed together on the floor, heads pressed against each other’s bare backs a scene reminiscent of El Salvador President Nayib Bukele’s harsh anti-gang crackdown.
 
It’s a war between the state and the drug traffickers, said Ezequiel, a 30-year-old employee at the gas station where Bussanich was killed. Ezequiel, who gave only his first name for fear of reprisals, said his mother has since begged him to quit. We’re the ones paying the price.


Even Milei’s supporters have mixed feelings about the crackdown, including Germn Bussanich, the father of the slain gas station worker.

They’re putting on a show and we’re facing the consequences,” Bussanich told reporters. A leafy city 300 kilometres (180 miles) northwest of Buenos Aires, Rosario is where revolutionary Ernesto Che Guevara was born, Messi first kicked a soccer ball and the Argentine flag was first raised in 1812. But it most recently won notoriety because its homicide numbers are five times the national average.

Tucked into a bend in the Parana River, Rosario’s port morphed into Argentina’s drug trafficking hub as region.

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