MOURNING A MAYOR
A suspect reportedly says that a Mexican gang paid nearly $30,000 to have the town leader killed.
MEXICO CITY — Gisela Mota was sworn in to office as mayor of Temixco in Morelos state on New Year’s Day, after promising to help free the town from the grip of organized crime.
Less than 24 hours later, the 33-year-old politician was dead — the latest of hundreds of public servants to be the victims of drug-related violence in Mexico in the last decade.
On Sunday, the Mexican news website SinEmbargo reported that one of three suspects detained after the shooting told authorities that the attackers were paid 500,000 pesos — about $29,000 — to kill Mota. The newspaper El Universal said the killing was the work of the drug gang Los Rojos, or the Reds, which has been engaged in a bloody battle for territory against rival groups in neighboring Guerrero state.
“I hope and pray to God that Gisela’s death helps to make us all more conscious” of the crime problem, said Roman Catholic Bishop Ramon Castro, speaking Sunday at a memorial Mass for Mota in Temixco, according to the newspaper Reforma. “I’m no expert, but the only thing I see is that various communities here are in the hands of organized crime — I’ve been saying that for a while, and begging, and no one has been able to do anything.”
Mota, who was part of the left-leaning Democratic Revolution Party, had vowed to “combat organized crime frontally and directly,” said Agustin Basave, the party’s national president, who sent his condolences to her family via Twitter. Before becoming mayor, she had been a congresswoman representing Morelos state since 2013.
She was shot to death in her home around 7 a.m. Saturday, in the small nearby town of Pueblo Viejo, authorities said. The town is about a two-hour drive from Mexico City.
After her killing, media reported that Mota’s bodyguards and police gave chase and a shootout ensued, during which two people were killed and three arrested. Bulletproof vests, balaclavas, a 9-millimeter pistol, an Uzi rifle and various types of ammunition were recovered from the car they were traveling in, according to a statement from the local prosecutor’s office.
Javier Perez Duron, Morelos’ state prosecutor, confirmed at a news conference that three suspects were in custody and that Mota’s killers would be subjected to “the full weight of the law.”
Morelos Gov. Graco Ramirez announced three days of official mourning.
Temixco lies on the outskirts of Morelos’ capital, Cuernavaca, which has seen high levels of drug-related violence, kidnappings and extortion in recent years.
Mota’s death brings the number of local elected officials killed in Mexico in the last decade to nearly 100, according to the Assn. of Local Mexican Authorities.
In a statement issued via Twitter, the group said that more than a thousand public municipal servants have been killed since 2006, mainly by organized crime.
“Urgent action is needed from the government to stop this wave of violence,” the statement said.
In 2006, then-President Felipe Calderon launched a crackdown on organized crime, but since then violent homicides have rapidly increased.
Although the current president, Enrique Peña Nieto, has continued Calderon’s crackdown, more than 100,000 people are now dead or missing as a result of violence generated by conflict between rival gangs or with the authorities.
Such killings are rarely solved. Even when they are, the corruption within Mexico’s judicial system and its reputation for abuse and torture of suspects often leave a cloud of doubt in the public mind.