Los Angeles Times

Video of Mexican killing stirs outcry

- By Kate Linthicum kate.linthicum @latimes.com Cecilia Sanchez in The Times’ Mexico City bureau contribute­d to this report.

MEXICO CITY — The soldiers were caught on video carrying out what appears to be an extrajudic­ial killing.

In security camera images in Puebla state, a group of Mexican military officers fire on a car carrying suspected gasoline thieves. The soldiers then drag a man from the car who appears badly injured and lay him face-down in the street. A few moments later, a soldier fires a single bullet into the back of the man’s head.

It’s unclear what happened to two other men seen dragged from the car and off camera.

The video, which was recorded May 3 and made public Wednesday by the news agency Diario Cambio, sparked outrage in Mexico, where lawmakers are debating several versions of a law that would legalize and expand the military’s enforcemen­t of domestic security across the country.

For a decade now, soldiers and naval officers have been embedded in local communitie­s as part of the government’s strategy to fight drug cartels. Despite previously documented cases of soldiers engaging in torture and carrying out execution-style killings, Mexico’s armed forces tend to be regarded as less corrupt than local and state police forces, some of whom collaborat­e with the cartels.

Angelica de la Peña, chairwoman of the Senate Commission on Human Rights, said Wednesday that the video is further evidence that the armed forces should be focused on foreign threats and not on policing local communitie­s.

“There was already concern about the use of excessive force by the military, and now this video seems to give us proof,” she said.

De la Peña, who belongs to the opposition Democratic Revolution Party, has been a vocal opponent of efforts by the ruling party to pass the so-called Law on Internal Security.

The National Human Rights Commission, the government’s independen­t watchdog, said it was already investigat­ing claims of human rights violations by soldiers in the same area on the same day and had already examined the video.

The shooting appears to be part of a broader series of deadly clashes that night in the town of Palmarito Tochapan between authoritie­s and suspected fuel smugglers known as huachicole­ros, who specialize in pilfering fuel from pipelines belonging to the state-owned oil company Pemex. Authoritie­s said the thieves, some of whom are believed to have connection­s to Mexico’s drug cartels, attacked military forces who were responding to reports that thieves had breached a pipeline.

The day after the clashes, state officials told reporters at least 10 people were killed, including four soldiers and six “presumed criminals.” Federal officials announced that they were sending at least 1,000 more soldiers to fight gasoline theft.

Officials accused the smugglers of using women and children as human shields during the altercatio­ns. But civilians protesting the military actions blamed the army for the clashes and casualties.

“We don’t want the military to attack us,” read a banner raised by a protester during a blockade last week on the Puebla-Veracruz highway.

Mexico’s attorney general said Wednesday that the incident would be fully investigat­ed. The Defense Department said it would fully cooperate.

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