Mexico police find headless corpses

by rahul | August 29, 2008 at 05:54 am
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The decapitated bodies of 12 people were found by Mexican police on Thursday at Merida, Yucanta state. It is believed this event is related to drug wars.

Mexican police have found decapitated bodies of 12 people, some of which show signs of torture. Jose Guzman, a Yucatan state prosecutor, said the bodies were found by residents of the area on Thursday. Eleven headless male bodies were found piled on top of each other and covered with blankets in a suburb of Merida, the capital of Yucatan state. A twelfth body was found in a town called Buctzotz, 70km northeast of Merida. Its head is also missing. "We believe that the 12 executions were an isolated incident and not part of a strategy to destabilize the state," Guzman told reporters. A top Mexican public security official who visited Merida recently had noted that the city had remained largely untouched by the drug war that has left more than 2,600 dead in Mexico so far this year.

 

Mass protest

 

Mexicans plan nationwide mass protests on Saturday, in which they will dress in white and carry only candles, in a bid to force the government to act over a spike in murders, kidnappings and police corruption. Rights and religious groups, kidnap victims and citizens plan to march down major avenues in towns and cities across the country.  The planned protests come amid daily reports of murders and massacres, particularly in the northern Chihuahua State, which has the highest murder rate in the country and where drug cartels are fighting a turf war for control of key drug routes to the United States. Violence has escalated throughout Mexico since Felipe Calderon, the Mexican president who took office at the end of 2006, launched a crackdown on drug trafficking that included deploying more than 36,000 soldiers across the country. Some 2,700 people have died this year in gangland-style killings, more than in all of 2007, according to national media and Mexico has overtaken Colombia and Iraq with its kidnapping record

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