Thursday, September 05, 2019

MURDERS IN MEXICO

77% Increase in Organized Crime Related Homicides in August

BY Yaqui from MND and Milenio

Borderland Beat
September 4, 2019

Murders attributed to organized crime broke a record in August at 2,290, a 77.8% increase over the same month last year. It was the third month in a row with over 2,000 such murders — there were 2,264 in July and 2,249 in June.

With 240 murder cases, Guanajuato topped the list of the most violent states, followed by México state with 206, Baja California 196, Veracruz 176, Jalisco 167 and Michoacán 128.
The month’s most striking case, however, is that of Veracruz, which saw one of the year’s worst massacres when an attack on the Caballo Blanco nightclub in Coatzacoalcos, Veracruz left 30 dead and 13 injured.

That attack, alone, bumped the murder rate in the state by 35.3% over the previous month.

Although Michoacán saw just one more murder than in July and did not surpass its June total of 140 cases, it also stood out in August for two grave instances of violence linked to narco-trafficking.

The first was on August 8 when the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) left 19 bodies hanging from an overpass in Uruapan.

The second was Friday’s gun battle in Tepalcatepec, Michoacán between the CJNG and a rival, Juan José “El Abuelo” (The Grandfather) Farías Álvarez, which left at least 9 dead and has ongoing skirmishes.

Guanajuato is the battleground between the CJNG and the Santa Rosa de Lima Cartel, "El Marro". The bitter rivalry sent the state’s homicide rate up to 240 cases, shattering July’s total of 185.

Despite the historic levels of violence, federal Public Security Secretary Alfonso Durazo said at a press conference on Friday that Mexico is getting closer to achieving peace, while admitting that the government’s anti-crime strategy has not yet delivered its goal.

EDITOR’S NOTE: Except for Baja California, none of the other states that border the US - Sonora, Chihuahua, Coahuila, Nuevo León, and Tamaulipas – are listed in the murder rate. The states of Guanajuato, México, Veracruz, Jalisco and Michoacán are all far removed from the US. Does this mean that Texas college students are safe visiting the cities of Ciudad Juarez, Nuevo Laredo, Nogales, Reynosa, and Matamoros during spring break? Ha ha ha!

2 comments:

Trey Rusk said...

When a country's gross domestic product is drugs and human smuggling and the enterprises are run by criminal gangs it would tend to be classified as unsafe. I have friends that live on the border and they say it's a shithole.

bob walsh said...

Frankly, Scarlet, .......