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700 caught in Mexico protests

Blockades seen to lead to shortage of basic goods, fuel

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MEXICO CITY - Protests and looting fueled by anger over gasoline price hikes in Mexico have led to four deaths, the ransacking of at least 300 stores and the arrests of more than 700 people, officials said.

The country’s business chambers said the combinatio­n of highway, port and terminal blockades and looting this week forced many stores and businesses to close and threatened supplies of basic goods and fuel. The scenes of mass lootings came as parents faced the last shopping day to get presents for their children before the Jan. 6 Epiphany or Three Kings Day holiday.

Two people were found dead amid looting in the port city of Veracruz but an official with the state prosecutor said late Thursday that the killers had not yet been identified. The official was not authorized to talk to the press and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Earlier, officials said a bystander was run over and killed by a driver fleeing police also in Veracruz, and a police officer was killed trying to stop robberies at a gas station in Mexico City.

Mexicans were enraged by the 20 percent fuel price hike announced over the weekend as part of a government deregulati­on of the energy sector.

While acknowledg­ing the anger, President Enrique Pena Nieto said Thursday he would forge ahead anyway with the deregulate­d price scheme, which would do away with fuel subsidies and allow gasoline prices to be determined by prevailing internatio­nal prices.

“I know that allowing gasoline to rise to its internatio­nal price is a difficult change, but as president, my job is to precisely make difficult decisions now, in order to avoid worse consequenc­es in the future,” Pena Nieto said in a televised address. “Keeping gas prices artificial­ly low would mean taking money away from the poorest Mexicans, and giving it to those who have the most.”

While looting calmed somewhat Thursday, protesters blocked highways at about two dozen places. For much of the week, protesters have blockaded gas stations and some people have broken into stores to carry off merchandis­e.

Police in the capital said they had arrested 76 people for looting about 29 stores. In Mexico State, which borders Mexico City, 529 people had been detained as suspected looters.

Officials claimed many of the looting incidents were promoted through social media.

With blockades affecting everything from gas distributi­on terminals, seaports and highways to shopping centers and gas stations, the Communicat­ions and Transport Department announced it would cancel permits for any truckers who block roads.

Truck and taxi drivers have been among the most affected by the fuel price increases, which took effect as the government ends regulated prices for gasoline and diesel.

The change boosted the average price for a liter of premium gasoline to 17.79 pesos (about 90 cents). That makes 4 liters, or about a gallon, equal to nearly as much as Mexico’s just raised minimum wage for a day’s work — 80 pesos (about $4).

The National Associatio­n of Self-Service and Department Stores of Mexico said in a statement Wednesday night that more than 79 stores had been looted and 170 were closed or blockaded in central Mexico, including the capital.

In the city of Veracruz, 50 establishm­ents suffered looting, according to a preliminar­y count by the local chamber of commerce Wednesday.

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 ?? (AP FOTO/FELIX MARQUEZ) ?? LOOTING CONTINUES. Men carry a refrigerat­or from a store being ransacked in Veracruz, Mexico on Jan. 5, 2017. Anger over gasoline prices hikes is fueling more protests and looting. Officials say the unrest has resulted in the death of a policeman, the...
(AP FOTO/FELIX MARQUEZ) LOOTING CONTINUES. Men carry a refrigerat­or from a store being ransacked in Veracruz, Mexico on Jan. 5, 2017. Anger over gasoline prices hikes is fueling more protests and looting. Officials say the unrest has resulted in the death of a policeman, the...

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