The Guardian (USA)

Mexico police station attacked as search continues for 14 missing employees

- Associated Press in Tapachula

Assailants have thrown explosives at a police station in Mexico’s southern state of Chiapas, as a massive search continued on Wednesday for 14 police employees abducted at gunpoint on a local highway.

The attacks highlight a new turf battle between cartels for control of drug and immigrant traffickin­g in the state, which borders Guatemala.

Mexico’s president, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, confirmed the kidnapping­s were part of a battle between two gangs, saying “nowadays that is the most common thing, that the groups clash”.

López Obrador said the men worked at a local prison, apparently as guards or administra­tive staff, though they are formally employed by the state police.

The spread of cartel conflict to Chiapas would mark an escalation. The state has long experience­d land, ethnic, political and religious conflicts, but had largely been spared the drug cartel violence hitting other parts of the country.

The president has taken a paternalis­tic, non-confrontat­ional attitude toward the cartels, and on Wednesday said “they had better release them [the abducted police employees]. If not, I’m going to tell on them to their fathers and grandfathe­rs”.

Also Wednesday, police in the city of Tapachula, near the border, said two patrol vehicles were damaged in the explosion outside a police station late on Tuesday. There was no immediate informatio­n on who tossed the explosive, which appeared to have been homemade.

State and federal law enforcemen­t officers conducted a land and air search for the missing police employees, who were forced from a van by gunmen earlier on Tuesday.

A video of the abducted police employees was posted on social media on

Wednesday. In it, one of the victims said the abductors were demanding the resignatio­n of at least three state police officials, including the second-in-command of the force.

The men in the video did not appear to be bound or show any obvious signs of mistreatme­nt.

The police employees were traveling to the capital of Chiapas in a personnel transport truck when they were intercepte­d by several trucks with gunmen.

The women in the vehicle were released, while the men were taken away.

The abduction occurred on the highway between Ocozocoaut­la and Tuxtla Gutiérrez, the state capital.

Violence in the Mexican border region with Guatemala has escalated in recent months amid a territoria­l dispute between the Sinaloa cartel, which has dominated the area, and the Jalisco New Generation cartel.

On 19 June, a confrontat­ion between the military and presumed organized crime members left a national guard officer and a civilian dead in Ocozocoaut­la, near where Tuesday’s kidnapping occurred.

 ?? ?? A federal police officer in Tapachula, Chiapas state, Mexico, in 2019. Photograph: Moisés Castillo/AP
A federal police officer in Tapachula, Chiapas state, Mexico, in 2019. Photograph: Moisés Castillo/AP

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