Police found the dismembered, decapitated bodies of 18 people in two abandoned vehicles in western Mexico on Wednesday in an apparent revenge killing between powerful drug gangs.
Police initially counted 12 bodies dumped in the car on a road between Mexico’s second city of Guadalajara and the lakeside city of Chapala, known for its large US expatriate community.
An anonymous call alerted police to the abandoned vehicles and the bodies were taken to forensic services in Guadalajara, a police official said.
Photo: Reuters
Jalisco State Attorney General Tomas Coronado Olmos called an urgent meeting with the state governor and said the killings appeared to have been in revenge for 23 killings on Friday last week in the northeastern state of Tamaulipas.
An arrested woman said that the killings were “the repercussion for what happened in Tamaulipas,” Coronado Olmos said.
The woman said she belonged to a local gang called Milenio, linked to the brutal Zetas drug gang.
Police found 23 bodies last Friday in the city of Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas, on the US border, including nine hanging from a bridge and 14 others that had been decapitated.
Suspected drug gang violence has flared in some areas in the past week, with more than 60 deaths in massacres or fighting with security forces.
Authorities blame many of the deaths on clashes between the Zetas — a gang set up by ex-commandos that deserted in the 1990s — and groups allied to the Sinaloa Federation of Mexico’s most wanted drug lord, Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman.
The latest killings echoed a brutal episode in November last year when police found 26 bodies dumped inside three vehicles in Guadalajara. Based on messages left behind, authorities believe those killings were an attack by the Zetas on the Sinaloa gang.
Shortly beforehand, police found 17 burned bodies in two cars in Culiacan, capital of northwestern Sinaloa State, fiefdom of the eponymous gang.
More than 50,000 people have been killed in drug-related violence since Mexican President Felipe Calderon launched a military offensive on the nation’s drug gangs on taking office in December 2006.
The Mexican government on Wednesday announced a new deployment of troops and federal police, this time to the central state of Morelia, near the capital.
Mexican Secretary of the Interior Alejandro Poire said the eighth such operation was necessary in the area known for the tourist city of Cuernavaca, because of “criminal incidents which require stronger attention.”
Violence in the state, including attacks on the main highway between Mexico City and the resort city of Acapulco, has soared in recent years.
‘CROSSING THE LINE’: China’s embassy in Seoul criticized US Forces Korea Commander General Xavier Brunson, asking if his ‘hostile’ remarks were authorized by Washington South Korea and the US are in talks over recent public remarks by the commander of US Forces Korea, Seoul’s presidential office said yesterday, after the comments drew sharp criticism from China. In a recent podcast interview, US Forces Korea Commander General Xavier Brunson described South Korea as “the dagger in the heart of Asia” from China’s east coast, prompting the Chinese embassy in Seoul to say that he had “truly crossed the line.” The interview came amid growing speculation that Washington might seek to expand the role of US Forces Korea in countering the growing regional influence of China, a key
Through the noise of rushing papers and whirring belts at a print factory in Kyoto, two creators watch their photo essay come to life in broadsheet form — part of an effort to win new audiences in the age of artificial intelligence (AI). Despite the decline of the publishing industry, self-publication and handmade “zine” magazines are growing in popularity in Japan, reflecting the nation’s enduring love of paper in the digital era. While speaking to Agence France-Presse at the plant, his hands black with ink, one of the creators, Kazuma Obara, said: “I think [paper] is a medium that engages all five
Australian researchers have trained lab-grown brain cells on a silicon computer chip to play the 1990s shooter game Doom and said they are just scratching the surface of what the neurons could be capable of doing. It is the science-fiction work of biotech boffins at Cortical Labs, who researched and developed the technology that harnesses the workings of the brain’s networking system. Each so-called “biological computer” contains about 200,000 living human brain cells, grown from stem cells that were harvested from blood donations. Having mastered the simple computer game Pong, where a paddle is moved up and down to send a ball
France experienced its hottest spring on record, the French weather service said on Tuesday, after an exceptional early heat wave that also broke highs for the season in England and Wales. Meteo-France said the average nationwide temperature over March to May was 13.8°C — about 1.7°C above the norm, and surpassing records set in 2011 and 2020. “The warmest spring since records began in 1900,” it said in a bulletin. All three months were warmer than average, but the onset of an “unprecedented heatwave” late last month pushed the mercury to highs typically seen at the height of the summer. “Our country had never