Sentences with phrase «fight against cartels»

The Commission should follow this lead and make concrete proposals to create an effective and level playing field for claimants in the EU to push forward the fight against cartels.
Can anybody really win the fight against the cartels?
As a result instead of going about doing your job you will be able to scout for resources, help unlucky Bolivians in their fights against the cartel, gather intel... It's unlikely for anyone to be bored, especially since we probably won't get any generic flag - or feather - hunting to pad the playtime.

Not exact matches

But they remained rivals, and the cartels fought a vicious turf war in Colombia, even as Escobar and his partners waged a war against the Colombian state to fend off arrest and extradition.
At the current time, Cártel Jalisco Nueva Generación (CJNG) and remnants of the Cártel Arellano Félix are aligned in their fight against warring factions of the Sinaloa Cartel's Los Aquiles and «Los Uriarte,» as previously reported by Breitbart Texas.
The individuals he is talking about are «Cartel Land's» twin protagonists, vigilantes from two different countries and two different cultures who are determined, each in his own way, to fight back against the endemic violence the Mexican drug cartels bring to everything they touch.
Cartel Land chronicles the near - parallel lives of two men, one Mexican and one American, who pick up arms against the cartels, fighting a war that they believe their governments have forgotten, only to be vilified by the people they are laying down their lives to defend.
The Autodefensas were risking their lives to fight against the Knights Templar Cartel and some of them were dying in the process.
In Michoacán, in response to his neighbors being gunned down and beheaded — an atrocity he photographed with his camera as proof of his enemies» barbarism — Dr. José Mireles sought to fight back against his community's oppressors by creating the Autodefensas, a vigilante group that took up arms against the cartels.
«We can't become the criminals we're fighting against...» Matthew Heineman's almost accidentally fearless exposé of Mexico's terrifying cross-border drug cartels opens with what looks like an outtake from Breaking Bad: an atmospherically torchlit scene of masked men cooking crystal meth, talking of American chemistry and local poverty, and how they will keep doing this «as long as God allows», whatever the consequences.
At most, the US border needs to be secured, and monitored from within and if we can help fight the war against cartels in Mexico, so be it.
Director Matthew Heineman's film centers on Dr. José Mireles, who decided to fight back against the cartels oppressing his community by creating the vigilante group, Autodefensas.
Heineman has captured some astonishing footage of gun fights, cartel members being roughed up, vigilantes instructing their followers to kill the cartel members they have captured and of local people protesting bitterly against the intimidation and violence they face.
But when OPEC first used its «oil weapon» against the US and Europe, the global response was to fight the OPEC cartel, and the Republicans did that by organizing a counter cartel (the IEA) to fight OPEC.
Another options is important public interest grounds, such as co-operation between authorities in the fight against fraud cartels and so on.
You remember, I'm sure, those heady days in 2008 - 9 when we were thrust, un-deputized, into the fight against crime, pitting our laptops and our wits — at least half of them — against the drug cartels existing in the minds of the Ottawa bureaucrats charged with the duty of keeping Canadians safe — and unlaundered — from terror.
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