The Jerusalem Post

Mexico City police chief shot, blames drug cartel

- •By PAuLO PRADA

MEXICO CITY (Reuters) – Mexico City’s chief of police was shot and injured and two of his bodyguards killed in a dramatic assassinat­ion attempt early on Friday that he quickly blamed on one of Mexico’s most powerful drug gangs, the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG).

The city’s public security chief Omar Garcia Harfuch suffered three bullet wounds as he and bodyguards came under heavy fire around dawn in an upscale Mexico City neighborho­od, where the attack was captured on security cameras.

Some three hours later, apparently from his hospital bed, Garcia sent out a message on Twitter blaming his injuries and the death of two bodyguards on a “cowardly attack” by the CJNG, a gang notorious as one of the most violent in Mexico.

A 26-year-old woman traveling in a car with relatives to sell street food nearby was killed in the gunfire that ripped through the Lomas de Chapultepe­c neighborho­od. The area is home to many wealthy people and has ambassador­ial residences.

President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador and Mexico City Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum said the attack showed that authoritie­s were putting pressure on criminal gangs in the capital, which has rarely witnessed such brazen outbreaks of violence.

“There will be no turning back,” Sheinbaum told a news conference.

Still, the early morning mayhem was the latest in a series of public security lapses that have raised tough questions about the president’s ability to control gang violence.

Grainy security camera footage broadcast on Mexican television showed a group of heavily armed men in an openbacked truck disguised as a work vehicle, and an SUV blocking off a road to open fire on Garcia’s automobile.

Separately, fast-arriving police could be seen shouting and moving towards the high caliber gunfire that rang out for several minutes just after 6:30 a.m. local time.

Television footage of Garcia’s armored SUV showed a vehicle riddled with bullets cordoned off by police.

Garcia was wounded in the shoulder, collarbone and the knee, Security Minister Alfonso Durazo told a news conference. Late on Friday evening, Garcia wrote on Twitter that he had come out of surgery and was well.

The assassinat­ion attempt served as a warning that “nobody is off limits” and was reminiscen­t of previous attacks on officials during Mexico’s drug war, said Gladys McCormick, a security analyst at

Syracuse University in New York.

It fit the CJNG’s modus operandi “to a T” and had the hallmark of the cartel staking out its turf, she said.

Led by a former police officer and based in the western state of Jalisco, the CJNG has been blamed for fueling record levels of violence in Mexico during its battles to eliminate rivals for control of drug traffickin­g and crime rackets.

The shooters fled. Mexican authoritie­s said 12 suspects were quickly rounded up and that two others were later caught in the State of Mexico, a region bordering the capital.

Late on Friday, the Mexico City Attorney-General’s Office said three more suspects, including the alleged mastermind of the attack, were detained in the capital’s Tlahuac borough.

Police recovered military-grade long guns, including a Barrett rifle, from the crime scene.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel