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Showered in blaze of bullets, upscale Mexican neighbourhood in shock after cartel assault


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Showered in blaze of bullets, upscale Mexican neighbourhood in shock after cartel assault

By David Alire Garcia

 

2019-10-20T220129Z_1_LYNXMPEF9J0PQ_RTROPTP_4_MEXICO-VIOLENCE-SINALOA.JPG

Members of a special unit of the Mexican Army conduct a patrol as part of an operation to increase security after cartel gunmen clashed with federal forces, resulting in the release of Ovidio Guzman from detention, the son of drug kingpin Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, in Culiacan, in Sinaloa state, Mexico October 19, 2019. REUTERS/Stringer

 

CULIACAN (Reuters) - The trendy bars and restaurants along the main strip of the Mexican city overwhelmed late last week by an army of cartel gunmen slowly began their recovery over the weekend even as many traumatized residents still shied away.

 

Culiacan's central Tres Rios neighbourhood, with its gated communities, upscale shopping centres and exclusive golf course, was victim to some of the most intense firefights last Thursday, concentrated on the street where soldiers attempted to arrest Ovidio Guzman, a son of jailed drug lord Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman.

 

While El Chapo's Sinaloa Cartel successfully pinched off access at various points in the city, they trained their focus on Tres Rios, where Ovidio Guzman was briefly found and detained, but later released after officials realized they were outmatched.

 

Mexico's foreign minister admitted on Saturday that the government feared upwards of 200 civilian casualties if the operation to extract the young narco had continued.

 

Just off the entrance of a Tres Rios seafood restaurant that found itself at the heart of the hours-long siege, workers scrubbed away dried blood from the steps.

 

They said the spot marked the final resting place of a cartel gunman following what officials described as 14 separate, armed attacks launched by the Sinaloa Cartel's convoys of pickup trucks against Mexico's overwhelmed military at different points in the city.

 

"It's going to be a struggle to open back up, but we have to do it," said the restaurant's owner, declining to provide his name, but ticking off his immediate priorities: "sweeping up the debris, cleaning up everything and calling for help to repair the damages."

 

As workers assessed the few windows that had not been pierced by the flurry of bullets, the owner acknowledged it will take time to lure customers back.

 

"Right now, everyone here is in a state of panic, but Tres Rios will still be the best part of Culiacan," he said.

 

Meanwhile, workers at the car wash next door to the restaurant focused on repairing metal vacuum cleaners ripped open by bullets.

 

Upon finding out that authorities sought to capture Ovidio Guzman and extradite him to the United States, the cartel's heavily armed gunmen strategically erected 19 blockades during a roughly four-hour stretch in the afternoon, preventing additional military and police from responding as terrorized locals scurried for cover.

 

One of the most intense firefights took place on the block behind the restaurant where local residents said several military vehicles had stopped along a non-descript building with tall, white walls, in a bid to extract El Chapo's son from a residence inside.

 

Now the walls stood covered with hundreds of bullet holes, as if the building had broken out in a rash.

 

The soldiers in the vehicles came under heavy fire from a hill across an adjacent drainage canal, separating Tres Rios from the Tierra Blanca residential neighbourhood, and several homes there were caught in the crossfire.

 

"They destroyed my bedroom windows. The walls, they're filled with bullet holes," said taxi driver Jose Manuel Uriarte, whose home is located just below the hill where he said gunmen had taken up positions to fire upon the military vehicles.

 

He pointed out, with fingers stained with paint from the repairs he had started, where his mattress had been covered by a blanket of broken glass.

 

An avocado tree in the lush garden outside his bedroom had been split open by the gunfire and Uriarte estimated that he had already found around 500 bullet casings nearby.

 

He spotted another on the ground, squatted down to pick it up and then handed it over like it was a souvenir.

 

Like other locals, he wonders about the possible infiltration of the cartel into local and state police, but said there is no doubt that the cartel proved itself to be the stronger force, at least for one violent afternoon last week.

 

And then his face turned angry and he pursed his lips.

 

"It's infuriating," he said, "because you have to ask yourself, 'Who's really in charge?'"

 

(Reporting by David Alire Garcia; Editing by Steve Orlofsky)

 

 

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-- © Copyright Reuters 2019-10-21
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24 minutes ago, Puchaiyank said:

See! There are places worse for expats than Thailand.

 

Seriously, the Mexican government can not protect it's citizens or expats from the cartels...

 

Quality of life around the world is being threatened by armed thugs and rogue armies...????

And all financed by half brain dead idiots who love to stick stuff up their noses or stick needles in their body.

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7 hours ago, lust said:

Sicarios... police.... cartels... what’s the difference? 
 

https://www.liveleak.com/view?t=9eTp2_1571446034

On two occasions the Mexican police tried to shake me down for cash.  In Mexico it’s  called “the bite” and usually for nominal amounts of about $20 or $30.  Pay the money and be on your way or argue and risk more serious phony charges.  

 

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1 hour ago, wombat said:

why do they want him in the states?

Non fulfilment of "filial piety" he's never once been to visit his Dad?

Or maybe some other ridiculous law that the USA has made up!

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3 hours ago, Thomas J said:

Tug,

 

I don't believe anyone "knows" where they get their weapons from.  With money you can buy almost anything from any source around the world.  Using your logic the USA gets its Fentanyl from loopholes in the Drug laws in the USA and China.  The terrorists in the middle east and Africa have no shortage of bombs, automatic weapons, armored personnel carriers, rocket propelled grenades, and mortars.  Did they get those from the USA loopholes in gun laws too? 

Please there's plenty of evidence to which I'll link below but common sense should tell you that given the ease of obtaining firearms, including powerful ones, in the USA, the long shared border, and the huge quantity of legitimate traffic between the 2 nations, why wouldn't the USA be the main source of firearms? Why would cartels  go elsewhere? Because they enjoy a challenge?

https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/the-flow-of-guns-from-the-u-s-to-mexico-is-getting-lost-in-the-border-debate

http://www.smallarmssurvey.org/fileadmin/docs/G-Issue-briefs/SAS-IB17-Mechanics-of-trafficking.pdf

https://www.gao.gov/assets/680/674570.pdf

http://vpc.org/indicted/

 

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