Saltillo in Mixtec
According to Forbes ranking of the Peru has gone from the post 52 (last year) as 62 in 2009 as an attractive country to do business. The purpose of the criteria Forbes ranking is not qualified to economies with high GDP growth and low unemployment but to the countries possessing the most desirable conditions for businesses. The ranking considers that personal freedoms are playing an important role, and therefore considered characteristics such as the right to participate in free and fair elections or freedom of expression and organization. Cheers, mate. I hope this year is also good for you, but for many people around the world, resulting in a catastrophe verdadra between just wars, devaluations, inflation, unemployment and so on. About your question about Saltillo, I think you can say that glottal occlusive usually is in the beginning of syllables. The generalized structure of the syllables in Mixtec is CV, CV, CVN. At least at school taught us to separate the syllables in the following way.
In Mixtec, any word ending in consonant. Some are written with n the end, but it is really nasalizadas vowels, as in the example below:
However, that for some words where the glottal occlusive go before another consonant. For example:
As I understand, in this case, the Saltillo is located at the end of the syllable, but as I say, the phenomenon only occurs in any syllable except the last, and always when the Saltillo precedes another consonant.