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Recent violence in north-central Mexico reportedly kills dozens

Mexico President Enrique Pena Nieto speaks during the presentation of the Law of Victims initiative in Mexico City on Wednesday, Jan. 9, 2013.
(Alex Cruz / EPA)
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MEXICO CITY -- At least 140 people reportedly have been killed in recent weeks in a suspected drug-cartel struggle over the north-central region of Mexico known as La Laguna.

Attacks and counterattacks are suspected between the Sinaloa and Zeta cartels over the region that is centered around metropolitan Torreon, in Coahuila state, and includes portions of Durango state. Local, regional and federal forces are also combatting traffickers as well as suspected corruption within their own ranks.

Some 140 people have been killed in a span of 40 days in fighting between the paramilitary Zetas and the Sinaloa federation under the control of fugitive drug lord Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, according to the daily El Universal. On Dec. 18 in the Durango city of Gomez Palacio, 23 inmates and guards died during an attempted jail-break and riot at a state prison.

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On Friday, state authorities in Coahuila arrested the police director and subdirector of the city of Matamoros on weapons charges and turned the two over to federal investigators. On Tuesday, authorities rounded up 66 Matamoros police officers for surprise confidence-control tests; only 58 returned to work Thursday night, the Torreon daily El Siglo reported.

The other eight officers’ whereabouts were unknown, but the Matamoros mayor told reporters the police officers were “not disappeared.”

Attacks have also been reported in recent days and weeks in metropolitan Monterrey and in Jalisco state.

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The increase in violence came during the first month of the new administration of President Enrique Peña Nieto, who entered office on Dec. 1. The month of December 2012 saw a slight increase in reported homicides in Mexico over November 2012, the daily Milenio said.

Peña’s government has said one of its top priorities is reducing the homicide rate that soared under the government of former President Felipe Calderon. The new administration, however, is so far sticking to the same basic strategy, with some adjustments, The Times reported.

At the same time, the national statistics institute known by its Spanish acronym INEGI said its “public security perception index,” measuring how safe Mexicans say they feel, rose in December over the same period last year.

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