At least 23 people were killed in separate incidents in northern Mexico on Sunday as the country continued to reel from drug-related violence.
In Ciudad Juarez, gunmen drove up to a house where a high school party was in full swing and opened fire killing 13 people and wounding 17 others, the city public safety agency said.
Most of the victims were “youngsters,” the Chihuahua state attorney general’s office said. Witnesses said the gunmen drove up to the house in several cars, first shooting at people gathered outside the dwelling, then pursuing some of the youngsters who jumped over a fence to get away.
“A young man was celebrating his birthday with his schoolmates … and when the host of the party came out to drop off his girlfriend” the shooting broke out, a neighbor said.
Local press reports said the party host’s father was among the dead.
Other sources said the young people were members of a local soccer team celebrating a championship victory, the Reforma daily said on its Web site.
Ciudad Juarez, on the border with the US state of Texas that holds Mexico’s record in bloodshed, with more than 2,500 people killed last year in drug-related gangland crimes.
It was the third mass shooting of youngsters in Mexico since September when, within two weeks, 28 youths were killed in two separate shootings at drug rehabilitation centers.
Meanwhile, 10 people were killed and 11 were wounded when gunmen attacked a bar in the city of Torreon, in the northern state of Coahuila.
Most of the victims were students aged between 19 and 25, authorities said.
The war waged by several powerful drug cartels in Mexico has already left 15,000 people dead. The government has deployed 50,000 troops and thousands of police in an effort to put the violence under control.
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