19 bodies found in Michoacán, Mexico

(Reuters) – Mexican authorities said Thursday August 8, that they found 19 bodies, some dismembered, in the southwestern state of Michoacan, as the federal government seeks to combat rising violence with a new militarized police (La Guardia Nacional).

The victims, which included three women, were found at three different locations in the drug-cartel hotbed of Uruapan, state prosecutor Adrian Lopez told reporters Thursday morning. Some of the victims were “dismembered,” while others had been shot, he added.

Grisly images posted on social media showed at least four half-naked bodies hanging from a bridge. Two bodies lay on the road below as locals went about their daily routines.

Battles between rival criminal groups have made Michoacan one of Mexico’s bloodiest states. Out of desperation, some locals have formed so-called “self-defense groups” to fight crime.

Uruapan, one of the state’s largest cities, has been a principal battleground in the war against and between drug cartels, which has left tens of thousands dead since it began in 2006.

In an attempt to contain the violence, the government of President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador launched the national guard, new militarized police force called the National Guard. 80,000 troops have been deployed so far, though they have also been tasked with managing migration.

Source: Reuters

Related posts

May is expected to be much hotter than other years in Yucatan

UNAM students demand AMLO to break diplomatic relations with Israel

Residents of Kanasin were victims of burglary