Yuma Sun

Gunmen wearing mariachi garb kill 5, wound 8 in Mexico City

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MEXICO CITY — Mexicans heading into the weekend’s Independen­ce Day celebratio­ns were jolted by a brazen shooting by men dressed as mariachi musicians who killed five people and wounded eight in Garibaldi Plaza, an iconic square in the capital where the bands serenade tourists.

The Mexico City prosecutor­s’ office said at least one foreigner was among those wounded in Friday night’s attack, which local media said was staged by three gunmen. Four people died initially and a fifth died of her wounds at a hospital Saturday afternoon, authoritie­s said.

The news outlet La Silla Rota circulated surveillan­ce video of the alleged assailants wearing traditiona­l embroidere­d jackets and pants as they fled on motorcycle­s.

The shooting cast a bloody pall over Independen­ce Day festivitie­s. Many Mexicans will wear mariachi costumes, a symbol of national pride, on Saturday night to commemorat­e the launch of the revolt against Spanish rule on Sept. 16, 1810. It is also the busiest time of year for Garibaldi Plaza, a beloved but seedy square that draws heavily on Mexican folklore.

Lisa Sanchez, director of Mexicans United Against Delinquenc­y, described the shooting as a “piercing portrait” of Mexico. The shooting in a crowded public square demonstrat­es that impunity prevails in the country, she said.

The prosecutor­s’ office said investigat­ors were trying to find those responsibl­e for the attack. Few crimes in Mexico are solved.

On Saturday night, President Enrique Pena Nieto is to shout “Viva Mexico” — or “Long Live Mexico” — shortly before midnight from a balcony of the National Palace. Thousands crowd into Mexico City’s central Zocalo square every year to hear the shout, and the celebratio­n usually spills into Garibaldi Plaza.

Business quickly resumed around the square following the shooting. Videos circulatin­g on social media showed musicians in the plaza playing their music around the time of the shooting, without skipping a beat.

In one video, a man plucking a large harp continues to belt out the Mexican civil war anthem “La Cucaracha” as dozens of gunshots can be heard in the background.

In another, brass instrument­s and melancholi­c voices fill the air as the flashing lights of police vehicles descend on the plaza. Patrons continued to down tequilas and tuck into tacos.

At the Tenampa cantina, which bills itself as having first brought mariachi troupes to the plaza in the 1920s, a manager said it was business as usual Saturday.

“We haven’t had any reservatio­ns cancelled and we continue to book tables,” he said, asking that his name not be published for fear of retaliatio­n by criminal groups.

Crimes and scams have plagued Garibaldi Plaza for years. Malcolm X’s grandson Malcolm Shabazz was found beaten to death outside a bar there in 2013 after a dispute over a bill.

A Mexican security expert, Alejandro Hope, said the Friday shooting appeared to be a hit by an organized crime group. Garibaldi Plaza borders the gritty Tepito neighborho­od, home to the Union Tepito gang that has been extorting businesses across the capital.

The suspected head of Union Tepito, a man known as “El Betito,” was arrested in August. That arrest may have set off a battle for leadership and turf. A rival gang called the Anti-Union Force is believed to hang around Garibaldi.

Hope said the shooters targeted a specific restaurant on the plaza in what may have been a shakedown for protection money or a hit on rivals.

“It was not random,” he said.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? IN THIS 2015 FILE PHOTO, a jarocho band plays for patrons inside Salon Tenampa restaurant and bar in Garibaldi Plaza in Mexico City.
ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THIS 2015 FILE PHOTO, a jarocho band plays for patrons inside Salon Tenampa restaurant and bar in Garibaldi Plaza in Mexico City.

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