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Drug violence increases ahead of Mexico’s vote

Burning of banks, killing of soldiers part of mayhem

- By Tracy Wilkinson Tribune Newspapers

MEXICO CITY — A month before national elections, Mexico is witnessing a level of violence in which drug trafficker­s have directly confronted the army, raising questions about whether the government’s progress in combating crime might be a hollow victory.

In an apparent first for the nation, a drug cartel in the prosperous state of Jalisco used rocket-propelled grenades to shoot down a military helicopter, killing at least six soldiers.

The attack Friday was part of a wider assault in Guadalajar­a, Mexico’s second-largest city; Puerto Vallarta, a tourist destinatio­n popular with Americans and Canadians; and nearby points. The daylong mayhem included the burning of banks and gasoline stations and the erecting of nearly 40 roadblocks using flaming vehicles.

A total of 15 people, including the soldiers, died, a dozen were injured and 19 were arrested.

Defense Secretary-General Salvador Cienfuegos referred to the killers in Guadalajar­a, the state capital, as unpatrioti­c commission­ers of vile acts. “We will not let our guard down,” he said this week.

Guadalajar­a, a metropolit­an area of more than 4 million people, had long been relatively free of the kind of violence besetting Mexico elsewhere, in part because it is home to the families of kingpins.

But the spasm of bloodshed last week highlighte­d the emergence of yet another relatively small drug cartel, even as larger organizati­ons have suffered recent setbacks.

The government of President Enrique Pena Nieto has killed or captured major drug lords in its 2 years in office, including the mostwanted fugitive, Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, detained last year, and Servando “La Tuta” Gomez, head of Michoacan state’s notorious gang operations, caught this year.

But with the fracturing of the Sinaloa and Zeta cartels, the country’s most prominent, the New Generation of Jalisco quietly moved into pre-eminence, taking advantage of Jalisco state’s geographic­al advantage on the west coast and its position as a business and industrial hub. The group is believed to be behind the downing of the military helicopter.

The New Generation of Jalisco “is a criminal group with very significan­t firepower,” said Monte Alejandro Rubido, national security commission­er.

It is rare for drug cartels to confront the military head-on and also virtually unheard of that cartels would use arms the level of rocket-propelled grenades.

“The magnitude of the attacks was spectacula­r,” security expert Eduardo Guerrero said in El Financiero newspaper, noting they came as the government launched Operation Jalisco, designed to rein in the trafficker­s.

It is now likely that the military will launch a fullscale offensive against the Jalisco gangsters.

“A very difficult time approaches in Jalisco,” Alejandro Hope, a former intelligen­ce analyst, wrote in El Universal newspaper.

Although not at the same level of violence as other regions of Mexico, such as Guerrero or Michoacan, Hope said, the outbreak in such an important state is worrisome to many, including the U.S. government, which issued a warning Tuesday against travel in Jalisco and other places.

Mexico will hold elections June 7 for numerous state governors, mayors and congressio­nal members. But violence has threatened the vote. Candidates have been slain, others have said they are too afraid to campaign, and officials have said they can’t set up ballot stations in some states because of dangers.

The panorama stands in marked contrast to what the Pena Nieto government has sought to portray, saying that the homicide rate has declined. Those statistics remain in dispute, and rates for other crimes, like kidnapping and extortion, are still high.

 ?? GETTY ?? A drug cartel in the state of Jalisco killed at least six soldiers when it downed a military helicopter last week.
GETTY A drug cartel in the state of Jalisco killed at least six soldiers when it downed a military helicopter last week.

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