The Guardian Australia

Mexico mayor among 18 killed in town hall massacre

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Attackers gunned down a mayor, his father and 16 other people in the southern Mexican state of Guerrero on Wednesday, authoritie­s have said.

The state’s attorney general, Sandra Luz Valdovinos, told Milenio television late on Wednesday that 18 people were killed and two were wounded in the town of San Miguel Totolapan. Among the dead were the mayor, Conrado Mendoza, and his father, a former mayor of the town, she said. Two additional people were wounded.

Images from the scene showed a bullet-riddled city hall.

Later on Wednesday, in the neighbouri­ng state of Morelos, a state lawmaker was shot and killed in the city of Cuernavaca, south of Mexico City.

While attacks on public officials are not uncommon in Mexico, these come at a time when the security strategy of the country’s president, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, is being sharply debated. The president has placed tremendous responsibi­lity on the armed forces rather than civilian police for reining in Mexico’s persistent­ly high levels of violence.

San Miguel Totolapan is a remote township in Tierra Caliente, which is one of Mexico’s most conflict-ridden areas, disputed by multiple drug traffickin­g gangs.

In 2016, Totolapan locals fed up with abductions by the local gang Los Tequileros kidnapped the gang leader’s mother to leverage the release of others.

In Cuernavaca, the Morelos state attorney general, Uriel Carmona, said two armed men traveling on a motorcycle fatally shot state deputy Gabriela Marín as she exited a vehicle.

Local outlets said Marín, a member of the Morelos Progress party, was killed at a pharmacy in Cuernavaca. A person with Marín was reportedly wounded in the attack.

The Morelos governor, Cuauhtémoc Blanco, condemned the attack and said via Twitter that security forces were deployed in search of the attackers.

The deaths of Mendoza and Marín brought the number of mayors killed during López Obrador’s administra­tion to 18 and the number of state lawmakers to eight, according to data from Etellekt Consultore­s.

Mexico’s Congress this week is debating the president’s proposal to extend the military’s policing duties to 2028. Last month, lawmakers approved López Obrador’s push to transfer the ostensibly civilian National Guard to military control.

 ?? Photograph: EPA ?? Members of the Mexican army guard the scene at the municipal palace of San Miguel Totolapan after the attack.
Photograph: EPA Members of the Mexican army guard the scene at the municipal palace of San Miguel Totolapan after the attack.

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