At least 35 dead as drug violence spreads across Mexico

Vehicles drive along a street in the municipality of Badiraguato, in the Mexican state of Sinaloa. Picture: Roberto Armenta/Reuters

Vehicles drive along a street in the municipality of Badiraguato, in the Mexican state of Sinaloa. Picture: Roberto Armenta/Reuters

Published Apr 24, 2017

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Mexico City - At least 35 people were

killed over the weekend in Mexico, according to local officials,

amid a widespread surge in drug gang violence that has driven

murders to a level not seen since 2011.

In Sinaloa state, 12 people were killed in different

incidents since the early hours of Sunday, according to local

officials.

Battles between gangs have increased in the area following

the arrest last year of Sinaloa cartel boss Joaquin "El Chapo"

Guzman, who was extradited in January to the United States.

Nine people were killed in what prosecutors said on Sunday

was a gun battle between rival drug gangs in the mountains of

Mexico's west coast state of Michoacan.

The shootout took place Saturday in an isolated village of

the municipality of Churumuco, which borders on Guerrero state,

where eight bodies were found on the main street and another in

the nearby sierra, the state prosecutor's office said in a

statement.

In January 2014, the federal government effectively took

over control of Michoacan for more than a year in a bid to curb

violence between drug gangs and community militias that had

risen up to fight extortion and kidnappings.

The region, especially Guerrero state, is the site of the

worst violence in Mexico as gangs battle over fields of opium

poppies, which are used to make heroin. A surge in U.S. demand

for heroin has fed the violence.

Eight bodies were found in different sites around Guerrero

on Sunday while another six bodies were found in Veracruz state

on the Gulf of Mexico, according to local officials.

Violence in Mexico has risen to its worst since 2011. In

March, there were 2020 recorded murders, the highest for any

month since June 2011, according to government data.

President Enrique Pena Nieto is facing rising criticism over

his handling of the spike in bloodshed.

Murders had fallen from their 2011 peak but killings began

climbing again during the last two years. Guerrero is the

bloodiest state while Michoacan, Sinaloa and Veracruz are in the

top six states for firearms murders.

Reuters

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