Houston Chronicle

Soldiers and gasoline smugglers clash in Mexican state of Puebla; 10 dead

- By Patrick J. McDonnell

MEXICO CITY — At least 10 people were killed, including four soldiers, in clashes between Mexican troops and fuel thieves in Puebla state, Mexican officials said Thursday.

The clashes, which took place Wednesday evening, were the deadliest confrontat­ions to date between Mexican authoritie­s and fuel smugglers known as huachicole­ros.

The bands of smugglers specialize in pilfering fuel from pipelines belonging to the state-owned Petroleos Mexicanos, or Pemex, and selling the product on the black market. The thieves hawk the cut-rate gasoline in plastic containers along roadsides.

The military has been deployed in force against the massive gas-smuggling industry, which reportedly costs the financiall­y troubled Pemex hundreds of millions of dollars a year in lost revenue. But entire families have come to depend on the smuggling enterprise, authoritie­s say.

Analysts say the smugglers work in tandem with organized narco-gangs, such as the ultra-violent Zetas, who have a major presence in the oil-producing Gulf Coast state of Veracruz. Veracruz borders Puebla, a hub of the gasoline-pilfering industry.

The huachicole­ros have been tapping into pipelines and pilfering fuel for more than a decade, authoritie­s say, but the thefts have accelerate­d as gasoline prices have risen this year.

Wednesday’s clashes occurred in the town of Palmarito Tochapan, where, according to authoritie­s, smugglers and their supporters attacked military forces responding to reports that thieves had breached a pipeline. The army said it deployed about 1,000 troops to quell the violence.

Palmarito Tochapan is part of the municipali­ty of Quecholac, one of the towns in what authoritie­s call the “red triangle” of fuel smuggling. Authoritie­s say the pipeline theft gangs practicall­y control some regions and work in collusion with corrupt police and politician­s.

The 10 dead were four soldiers and six “presumed criminals,” Diodoro Carrasco, government secretary in Puebla, told reporters. Among the six civilians killed was one woman, Carrasco said. More than a dozen people were injured, officials said.

 ?? Jose Castanares / AFP / Getty Images ?? Villagers create roadblocks with burning tires to protest an army crackdown the day after a clash between soldiers and fuel thieves known as huachicole­ros, who tap the pipelines of state-owned oil giant Pemex.
Jose Castanares / AFP / Getty Images Villagers create roadblocks with burning tires to protest an army crackdown the day after a clash between soldiers and fuel thieves known as huachicole­ros, who tap the pipelines of state-owned oil giant Pemex.

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