
Sol remembers her first kill for a Mexican cartel: a kidnapping she committed with a handful of other young recruits that twisted into torture and bled into murder. She was 12 years old.
Sol had joined the drug cartel a few months earlier, recruited by someone she knew as she sold roses on the sidewalk outside a local bar. She started as a lookout, but rose fast.
The cartel liked her childish enthusiasm for learning new skills, her unquestioning loyalty, and, perhaps most importantly, her status as a minor protected her from severe punishment if the cops ever caught her.
“I obeyed the boss blindly,” Sol, now 20 years old, told Reuters, speaking from the rehabilitation center in central Mexico where she is trying to patch her life back together. “I thought they loved me.”
Sol declined to say how many people she killed during her time in the cartel. She said she’d been addicted to methamphetamine from the age of nine. When she was 16 she was arrested for kidnapping – her only criminal conviction – and spent three years in juvenile detention, according to her lawyer.
Reuters is withholding Sol’s full name and the names of the city where she worked and the cartel she joined, to protect her. The news agency was unable to independently verify the details of Sol’s account, although psychologists at the center and her lawyer said they believed it was accurate.
Security experts say children like Sol are a casualty of a deliberate strategy by Mexican organized crime groups to recruit minors into their ranks by preying on their hunger for status and camaraderie.
In cartel slang, they are known as ‘pollitos de colores’ or ‘colorful chicks,’ after the fluffy baby chicks sprayed with lurid, toxic colors and sold at Mexican fairgrounds. They’re cheap, burn bright, and don’t last long.
Click here to read the complete, original article by Lizbeth Diaz on Reuters
Source: Reuters