Waterloo Region Record

Mexico’s president says he won’t accept armed vigilantes

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Mexico’s president said Tuesday he will not accept vigilantes arming themselves, and suggested they are serving local political bosses or gangs.

President Andrés Manuel López Obrador was responding to a drill held over the weekend by about 100 vigilantes in the southern state of Chiapas. The group, which calls itself “The Machete,” said it was formed to evict drug trafficker­s from Indigenous communitie­s.

López Obrador said they were using that as an excuse, and suggested the vigilantes may have gotten their motley array of weapons from criminal organizati­ons.

“In no case will armed groups be accepted,” López Obrador said. “This can be used as an excuse, that there is a lot of crime, and that’s not what it is. It could be a political confrontat­ion.”

While the president said his administra­tion is still studying the group that formed in the Chiapas township of Pantelho, he refused to believe they were just residents fed up with crime and killings.

“Either it is a question of political manoeuvrin­g in the region, control by bosses,” he said, “or it is criminals. We have to see where they got their weapons.”

The previous administra­tion briefly embraced so-called “self-defence” groups in the western state of Michoacan in 2013 and 2014, before most were found to be infiltrate­d by drug gangs. López Obrador said that is a mistake he isn’t going to repeat.

But he did not say whether his administra­tion would try to disarm them.

As part of his “hugs, not bullets” strategy, López Obrador has studiously avoided open confrontat­ion with protesters, drug cartels and almost anyone else.

But that strategy has neither reduced crime nor homicides in Mexico.

The township of Pantelho has seen a number of confrontat­ions since mid-June in the region and local human rights groups say around 2,000 people have been forced to flee their homes in recent years because of the fighting.

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