Los Angeles Times

More candidates killed in Mexico

Slayings accelerate before Sunday’s vote. One newspaper puts the season total at 48.

- By Patrick J. McDonnell patrick.mcdonnell @latimes.com Twitter: @Pmcdonnell­LAT Cecilia Sanchez of The Times’ Mexico City bureau contribute­d to this report.

As Sunday’s election nears, the pace of slayings picks up, with 10 people killed just this month.

MEXICO CITY — The number of political candidates killed in Mexico has increased dramatical­ly in the run-up to elections Sunday.

Since early April, when The Times wrote about the issue, 20 more candidates have been killed — including 10 this month. A detailed count by the Mexican daily El Universal puts the 10month election season total at 48 — most of them seeking provincial posts far from the capital.

The latest victim was Emigdio Lopez Avendano, who was killed Monday on a highway with four other people. A member of the leftist National Regenerati­on Movement, he was running for the legislatur­e in the southern state of Oaxaca.

Until recently, most of the assassinat­ions received only fleeting attention in the Mexican press — in sharp contrast to a presidenti­al campaign that has generated blanket coverage. But official outrage has become more pronounced.

Janine M. Otalora, who heads Mexico’s electoral tribune, said last week that the carnage was marring the electoral process.

“Criminal hands are acting in a premeditat­ed and despicable manner to decide by means of violence who should or should not be on the electoral ballot,” Otalora told reporters after the killings of two mayoral candidates in two days in the western state of Michoacan.

President Enrique Peña Nieto has condemned the killings as “unacceptab­le,” and Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, the front-runner in the race to become the next president, has called them “lamentable.”

Other lawmakers have joined with columnists, television commentato­rs and other pundits in denouncing a direct threat to democracy.

Still, Mexico’s leaders seem powerless to halt the killings, which have targeted candidates from all major political parties.

The slayings have widely been seen as the work of criminal gangs that hold a grip on large swaths of territory and demand compliance from local government­s to aid drug traffickin­g and other enterprise­s.

“These are not small islands of violence, but a vast archipelag­o of barbarism,” wrote columnist Jesus SilvaHerzo­g Marquez in Mexico’s Reforma newspaper.

“The mafias don’t need to assault the palace directly. They do not look to exercise power directly. They want power at their service, and to ensure this they send their messages of death.”

Sunday’s presidenti­al, congressio­nal and local contests constitute Mexico’s biggest election day, with more than 3,000 offices up for grabs.

Commentato­rs often point to a grim logic of inevitabil­ity: More candidates mean a greater likelihood that some will be killed.

The great majority of cases remain unsolved, despite authoritie­s’ vows to investigat­e.

Most slain candidates were running for mayoral posts, city councils or state congressio­nal seats. Many lacked the bodyguards and other security infrastruc­ture that are routine for candidates for gubernator­ial and national posts.

Some had reported threats.

The attacks have occurred throughout the country, but violence-ridden states such as Guerrero, Michoacan and Puebla have been especially lethal. The bloodshed has discourage­d some from seeking office.

In Guerrero — a hub for cultivatio­n of the opium poppy, the raw material in the production of heroin — 10 candidates for local posts in the rural town of Cutzamala de Pinzon, home to about 5,000 people, have withdrawn from the race. News accounts cited pressure from criminal groups.

Many observers have expressed fear that the violence will have a chilling effect on the election.

“How many voters will show up with a fear of voting?” wrote columnist SilvaHerzo­g. “How many candidates are in the service of [organized] crime? How many have declined to participat­e to not face the criminals?”

Officials have publicly urged people to come out and vote anyway.

Among the most sensationa­l killings was the slaying of Fernando Puron, who was running for a federal congressio­nal seat in the northern state of Coahuila.

Puron had just completed a debate at a university campus in the border city of Piedras Negras on the evening of June 8 and was posing outside for a selfie with somebody from the crowd, as seen in closed-circuit security camera video obtained by the Mexican newspaper Vanguardia and widely circulated on social media.

That’s when a bearded figure in a cap emerged from the shadows, pulled a pistol from beneath his belt, pointed it at Puron, fired a single shot into the back of the candidate’s head and walked away.

Puron, 43, was taken in a police cruiser to a nearby hospital, where he was declared dead.

A member of the ruling Institutio­nal Revolution­ary Party, he was a former mayor of Piedras Negras, long a black-market hub across the Rio Grande from Eagle Pass, Texas. He earned a reputation as a reformer.

At the debate shortly before his killing, Puron had spoken about his determinat­ion to stand up to gangs.

“You have to confront crime directly, you cannot fear it, you call it what it is,” he said, according to Vanguardia. “Unfortunat­ely, not all lawmakers comply with their mission in matters of security. Some are even in collusion with criminalit­y.”

 ?? Francisco Robles AFP/Getty Images ?? MOURNERS attend a service for San Marcos alderman candidate Rodrigo Salado Lorenzo on June 1.
Francisco Robles AFP/Getty Images MOURNERS attend a service for San Marcos alderman candidate Rodrigo Salado Lorenzo on June 1.

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