Sunday, May 12, 2024

Michoacán self-defense force reforms as state ‘incapable of halting violence’

A self-defense force has reformed in the Sierra-Costa region of Michoacán to carry out public security duties and take up the fight against organized crime, although not everyone is on side.

Around 200 residents of the municipalities of Aquila, Coalcomán and Chinicuila — all ex-members of a self-defense force that formed in 2013 — came together early yesterday morning with weapons at the ready to declare that they are back in business.

“Today, the self-defense forces retake control of the municipalities. We’re going to tell our governments that we are honest self-defense members and that we’re going to take care of security, which is what is most needed in our region,” said Cemeí Verdía Zepeda, a self-defense leader from Aquila.

He charged that the state government has been incapable of halting the violence that is perpetrated by criminal groups including the Knights Templar Cartel, or Caballeros Templarios.

However, Verdía also said that the autodefensas, as the vigilantes are known, are open to collaborating with official security forces.

“We hope that if the government wants to help us, that they do it properly. We’re willing to work in coordination, but if not, [we ask that] they don’t get in our way . . .” he said.

The self-defense leader said there has been an outbreak of crime in the Sierra-Costa region that has included a spike in drug dealing while local residents have been threatened, drugged, kidnapped and even killed, especially in areas of the region that border Colima and Jalisco.

“That’s why today the comrades invited me to combat this and I will gladly do it. We’ve always been alive, we have remained united in the municipalities,” Verdía said.

Part of the self-defense force’s strategy will be strengthening security at the borders the region shares with the municipality of Lázaro Cárdenas to the south and Tecomán, Colima, to the north.

The latter was the most violent municipality in Mexico last year, according to a study by a citizens’ group.

Verdía also said that the reformed self-defense group would aim to eliminate the presence of a group of ex-self-defense members who have turned to committing crimes including kidnappings and murders.

“. . . We’re not going to stop, that’s the way it was four years ago when we started this movement and, without the government, we were able to run the criminals out and restore peace to our homes.”

But some residents of a community in the municipality of Aquila have rejected the reborn force. Armed with assault rifles, residents of Ostula ran Verdía out of town yesterday. “We don’t want you here!” they shouted, forcing Verdía to get into his armored Suburban SUV and withdraw from the town.

Further complicating matters was the dismissal Wednesday of Aquila police chief Germán Ramírez Sánchez, also known as “El Comandante Toro” and himself a former self-defense force leader.

Source: El Universal (sp), Contramuro (sp), Noventa Grados (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
Tourists in Puerto Progreso, Yucatán may have gotten more than they bargained for, as city registered temperatures of nearly 45 C

Which 10 Mexican cities just broke high temperature records?

5
Mexico City, Mérida and Puebla were a few of the cities that recorded their hottest temperature ever on Thursday.
Mexican authorities remove fentanyl pills, methamphetamine and cocaine from a drug lab found in Culiacán, Sinaloa, in February.

DEA threat assessment finds Mexican cartel activity in every US state

0
The Sinaloa and Jalisco cartels' dominance in the U.S. "has effectively eliminated any competition in U.S. markets," the DEA reports.
Mexico's second heat wave of the year swept across the country starting on May 3.

Heat wave turns deadly, with deaths in at least 3 states this week

0
From the official start of the hot season on March 17 to May 4, at least seven people died of heat-related illness, the federal Health Ministry reported.