Arab Times

Gunmen hit army chopper, 3 troops dead

-

GUADALAJAR­A, Mexico, May 2, (Agencies): Gunmen forced down a military helicopter in western Mexico on Friday, killing three troops as violence escalated across Jalisco state during a new operation against a powerful drug cartel.

Seven people were killed across Jalisco, including the three soldiers and a state police officer, while 19 people were wounded, officials said. Three gang suspects were killed in the fighting, authoritie­s said.

Three-dozen vehicles were set on fire or used as roadblocks in 39 spots affecting 25 towns, including the Pacific resort town of Puerto Vallarta and Guadalajar­a, Mexico’s second biggest city, where residents were urged to stay indoors during the May Day holiday.

Banks and gasoline stations were torched and numerous people were detained as violence flared on the day that the military and federal police launched Operation Jalisco to crack down on the Jalisco New Generation Drug Cartel.

Another 15 vehicles were torched in the neighborin­g states of Colima, Michoacan and Guanajuato, said National Security Commission Monte Alejandro Rubido.

“In reaction to the federal pres- ence, members of the criminal group began several actions in a bid to thwart the actions of the security agencies,” Rubido told a news conference.

Three more soldiers remained missing after the Cougar military helicopter, carrying 18 security forces, was hit on its tail rotor and forced to make an emergency landing Friday morning, Rubido said.

Ten soldiers and two federal police officers were injured in the incident, which took place when the aircraft spotted carloads of gunmen on a road between the towns of Casimiro Castillo and Villa Purificaci­on.

President Enrique Pena Nieto said in brief remarks to reporters that the operation was “in combat against a highly dangerous criminal organizati­on.”

Powerful

Officials say the New Generation cartel, led by Nemesio Oseguera, alias “El Mencho,” has grown so powerful that it has produced its own assault rifles in makeshift gun assembly shops and has forged ties with gangs worldwide.

The New Generation cartel has violently defied authoritie­s this year, killing 20 police officers in two ambushes in March and April.

The helicopter attack was near the town of Autlan, where a state police officer died in a clash with gang suspects. Shootouts were reported in three other towns.

Starting in the morning, buses and trucks were torched in more than a dozen streets of Guadalajar­a. The fires were put out hours later. Such tactics have been used by gangs elsewhere in Mexico to try to thwart police and military operations.

Authoritie­s urged residents of Guadalajar­a to stay indoors. No shootouts were reported in the city.

“Remain calm. If you have any reason to leave your house, don’t go out,” the Jalisco state prosecutor’s office said on Twitter.

The US consulate issued a security message advising its employees “to remain in their homes until the situation is resolved” and its citizens to avoid traveling to the area. By early evening, Governor Aristotele­s Sandoval told reporters that the situation was “calm” across Jalisco, though authoritie­s remained under “code red.”

The New Generation is a rising power of Mexico’s underworld that had been overshadow­ed by other groups such as the Sinaloa, Zetas, Gulf and Knights Templar cartels.

The gang has even recruited military deserters, including for- eign ones, security officials say.

The cartel has drawn the attention of the US government, which has funded Mexico’s battle against drug trafficker­s by providing equipment, training and intelligen­ce.

Last month, the US Treasury Department slapped financial sanctions on the New Generation and its leader Oseguera, as well as its allies, the Los Cuinis cartel.

Also: MEXICO CITY: The legislatur­e in the southern Mexican state of Guerrero has condemned the killing of a local mayoral candidate.

A statement late Friday from Guerrero’s congress reported the killing of Ulises Fabian Quiroz, who was a candidate for mayor of Chilapa for the governing Institutio­nal Revolution­ary PartyGreen party coalition. He was apparently shot Friday afternoon in the community of Atzacoaloy­a.

Guerrero has been the site of intense violence as multiple crime groups battle for control of drug cultivatio­n and smuggling routes.

In September, 43 students from a teachers college disappeare­d in the Guerrero city of Iguala. The government says they were killed and incinerate­d by a drug gang collaborat­ing with local police.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait