Mexico shudders at rise of rebellious reggaetoneros

MEXICO CITY, Aug 20 (Reuters) - Reggaeton, a Caribbean

fusion of hip hop with Latin timbres, is wildly popular across

Latin America but is raising eyebrows in conservative Mexico

City.

Fans of the sexually explicit music have become Mexico's

persona non grata of the moment, blamed for a string of offenses

ranging from theft to drug dealing.

The whimsically dressed "reggaetoneros," as they are known,

were catapulted into the public spotlight last month when police

canceled a concert in the city's Zona Rosa neighborhood.

Outraged, the reggaetoneros vandalized cars and briefly

occupied a local shopping mall, before police arrested more than

200 of them. In subsequent weeks, there have been more

disturbances across the city, followed by more mass arrests.

"Neighbors live in fear of reggaetoneros," ran a recent

headline in the broadsheet Reforma, which quoted shopkeeper

Juanita, a witness to rowdy gatherings outside a subway station.

"It's fair to say that they terrorize us," she told the paper.

Sociologists and human rights advocates say reggaetoneros

are not violent criminals but rather the latest subculture to

emerge from the ranks of Mexico's disadvantaged youth, who

struggle to find gainful employment in a country where nearly

every second person lives in poverty but which is also home to

Carlos Slim, the world's richest man.

"The word reggaetonero has come to mean an angry youth, a

drug-addict, or a delinquent, when neither the liking of that

music or involvement in that scene necessarily has anything to

do with the labels being assigned to them," said Luis Gonzalez,

head of Mexico City's Commission on Human Rights.

Donovan Leal, a 16-year-old from Mexico City's working class

Tepito neighborhood, said most fans were just into the music. "I

go to dance, not to take drugs, and they say I'm a delinquent,"

he said, selling chicken wings from a portable fryer.

Like rockers and punks before them, adherents of reggaeton,

which originated in Puerto Rico in the early 2000s, play up

their outsider status, donning mohawks or hair gelled into

spikes, facial piercings and make-up for both sexes.

"They are expressing themselves and expressing their

rejection of a city that rejects them," said Gonzalo Camacho, an

ethno-musicologist at Mexico City's UNAM university.

For straight-laced Mexico City residents, another count

against the reggaetoneros is the signature dance move "perreo,"

involving suggestive grinding with a member of the opposite sex.

For the eccentrically clad youths streaming into a nightclub

in the scruffy neighborhood of Ecatepec one recent Friday

afternoon, mischief seemed to be the last thing on their minds.

"The music is really cool," said Brian Vega, accompanied by

his friend, Antony Ortega. The two 17-year-olds, wearing

identical outfits of slinky red trousers, black t-shirts and

suspenders, caught the eyes of girls as they waited to get in.

"But I think perreo is the most important thing."

(Editing by Vicki Allen)