Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Gunmen terro rise Mexico’ s Culiacan, free ElChapo’sson

Capture of Ovidio Guzman triggers gun battles, sending civilians scurrying for cover

- Reuters letters@hindustant­imes.com

MEXICO CITY:Heavily armed fighters surrounded security forces in a Mexican city on Thursday and made them free one of drug lord Joaquin ‘El Chapo’ Guzman’s sons, after his capture triggered gunbattles and a prison break that sent civilians scurrying for cover.

Security minister Alfonso Durazo said a patrol by National Guard militarise­d police first came under attack from within a house in the city of Culiacan, 1,235km northwest of Mexico City.

After entering the house, they found four men, including Ovidio Guzman, who is accused of drug traffickin­g in the US.

The patrol was quickly outmatched by cartel gunmen, however, and it was withdrawn to prevent lives being lost, the government said. Simultaneo­usly, fighters swarmed through the city, battling police and soldiers in broad daylight. They torched vehicles and left at least one gas station ablaze.

“The decision was taken to retreat from the house, without Guzman, to try to avoid more violence in the area and preserve the lives of our personnel and recover calm in the city,” Durazo told Reuters.

The reaction to Guzman’s capture was on a scale rarely seen during Mexico’s long drug war, even after his more famous father’s arrests. The chaos was continuing as night fell.

A large group of inmates escaped from the city prison. Residents cowered in shopping centres and supermarke­ts as gunfire roared. Black plumes of smoke rose across the skyline.

Families with young children left their cars and lay flat in the road. Bullets cracked up ahead. “Dad, can we get up now?” a small boy said to his father in a video posted on Twitter. “No, stay there on the floor,” the man replied, his voice trembling.

Cristobal Castaneda, head of security in Sinaloa, told the Televisa network that two people had been killed and 21 injured, according to preliminar­y informatio­n. He said police had come under attack when they approached roadblocks manned by gunmen. He advised residents not to leave their homes.

It was not immediatel­y clear if members of the patrol were harmed in the standoff. Reuters TV showed scenes of at least three bodies lying next to cars on the street.

The chaos in Culiacan, long a stronghold for the Guzmans’ Sinaloa cartel, will increase pressure on President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, who took office in December promising to pacify a country weary after more than a decade of drug-war fighting. Murders this year are set to be at a record high.

Thursday’s events follow the massacre of more than a dozen police in western Mexico earlier this week.

 ??  ?? ■ A burning bus, set alight by cartel gunmen to block a road, is pictured during clashes with security forces in Culiacan, Mexico; (right) a bullet-ridden window of a vehicle.
■ A burning bus, set alight by cartel gunmen to block a road, is pictured during clashes with security forces in Culiacan, Mexico; (right) a bullet-ridden window of a vehicle.
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