World's Murder Capital 2013 (1 Viewer)

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DeathHand

Let It All Bleed Out
Inside San Pedro Sula, the 'Murder Capital' of the World

(CNN) -- It is night time as a pack of masked soldiers troop silently toward the front line of a deadly shootout between law enforcement officials and unknown gunmen in a dimly-lit Honduras neighborhood.

But the soldiers are too late to prevent the grisly scene that awaits them. One of their own is on the ground, seriously wounded. One of the attackers is dead, and three others have been shot.

"They didn't even say a word. They just pulled out their weapons and started shooting at our soldiers," said army commander Carlos Rolando Discua of the scene which has become all too familiar in Honduras' second largest city.

Discua oversees a unit of soldiers, often masked to protect their identities, who patrol the streets of San Pedro Sula, the so-called "murder capital of the world."

For the second straight year San Pedro Sula, in northwest Honduras, has topped the list of the world's 50 most violent cities with a rate of 169 intentional homicides per 100,000 inhabitants -- an average of more than three people every day.

The report, compiled by the Mexican think tank Citizen Council for Public Security, Justice and Peace, compared intentional homicide statistics around the world in 2012. The report does not include cities in the Middle East.

The sunny beach resort of Acapulco in Mexico ranked second in the group's list, followed by the Venezuelan capital of Caracas.

New Orleans is the murder capital of the U.S. according to the report, which ranked the city 17th on the list. Detroit, St. Louis, Baltimore, and Oakland were the other U.S. cities to make the list.

San Pedro Sula's challenge, experts say, is that Mexico's offensive against drug cartels and the U.S.'s active deportation of criminal immigrants are pushing the problem south. Some of this criminal element has ended up in Honduras where, like most Central American countries, law enforcement has few resources to fight it.

City residents say that "World's Murder Capital" is an undeserved label that is hurting local business.

There are only three morgues in Honduras, and one of them is in San Pedro Sula. Residents say people that are murdered elsewhere and then taken to the city's morgue are being grouped into the city's crime statistics.

He told CNN: "All of the crimes that happen in northern Honduras are registered as happening here. So what we businessmen are doing is an accurate count to determine where crime or violent deaths originate so that the information is truthful."

The University of Honduras said only people murdered in San Pedro Sula were tallied in the group's report -- and that in fact the actual murder rate in the city is even higher.

The authors of the report defended their research on the group's website, writing: "It is not the ranking that damages the image of the city but the violence and the government's inability to contain and reduce it. To hide the problems never solves them."

Honduras is far from the only country in the region with a murder problem. The top 10 -- and 39 of 50 overall -- most violent cities on the list are Latin American.

Authorities have launched "Operation Lightning" in San Pedro Sula, saturating violence hotspots with police and soldiers, and some residents believe the beefed up security presence is working.

"There's more security now," said local resident Nicolle Valladares. "And that gives us peace."
Unfortunately, at least so far, the measures seem to have had little impact on the murder rate.

Source
 

mrln

silent ghost
Mexican think tank sayin Honduras is the most dangerous place,when mexico is home of zetas and Mexican govt is scared of them. :rolleyes:
 

karathrace428

Facetious Trollop
and I thought Memphis was bad

well it still kinda is though....

When Forbes did a most dangerous cities list it was # 4. But they take in to consideration all violent crimes and I'm not clear on whether this was just murder. I think dangerous is a more valuable stat than just murder- personally, my desire to avoid being killed is about equal to my desire to avoid being raped. But yeah, Memphis= really fucking bad.

http://www.forbes.com/pictures/mlj45jggj/1-detroit/
 

SimmonS

SS Teutonic knights templar
When Forbes did a most dangerous cities list it was # 4. But they take in to consideration all violent crimes and I'm not clear on whether this was just murder. I think dangerous is a more valuable stat than just murder- personally, my desire to avoid being killed is about equal to my desire to avoid being raped. But yeah, Memphis= really fucking bad.

http://www.forbes.com/pictures/mlj45jggj/1-detroit/

It doesn't entirely make sense to me why these cities, with relatively low populations compared to other major American cities like Dallas and Los Angeles, can't rank higher with regards to crime. It might be a socio economic thing but I would've thought more populated regions would have greater crime rates.
 

KillerLooks

Rookie
It doesnt surprise me at all that "39 out of 50" ranked are south american. Interesting article! I wonder if the residents really see as much crime as it sounds like. Time to google some pictures!
 

karathrace428

Facetious Trollop
It doesn't entirely make sense to me why these cities, with relatively low populations compared to other major American cities like Dallas and Los Angeles, can't rank higher with regards to crime. It might be a socio economic thing but I would've thought more populated regions would have greater crime rates.
It's because they do a per capita analysis, not just a tally of #s.
 

Toejam

Rookie
My church goes to Honduras.. No one said shit about any of that. All I heard about was taking off and landing at the airport there.. Blah blah blah!
 
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