Mexico arrests more than 100 local police officers for various abuses
and offenses
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[December 17, 2024]
By EDGAR H. CLEMENTE and ALBA ALEMÁN
MEXICO CITY (AP) — Authorities in two states in southern Mexico arrested
more than 100 local police officers Monday for various abuses and
offenses, adding to the long list of police corruption scandals in the
country.
In the largest of the two incidents, 92 municipal police officers in the
southern state of Chiapas were arrested after they tried to stop state
authorities from assuming command of a police surveillance camera
office.
Chiapas state prosecutors accused local police officers in the city of
Comitan of using the video cameras to inform local groups — some of
which are allied with drug cartels — about state and federal raids in
the area.
Chiapas state police chief Óscar Aparicio Avendaño said some of the 92
municipal Comitan police officers drew their guns on state officials
trying to take control of the video surveillance office, and forced them
out at gunpoint.
The 92 officers were held pending charges of rioting and abuse of
authority.
After they were detained, some local residents blocked streets and
destroyed or damaged video cameras; about 30 of them were arrested on
riot charges.
At issue are local groups that claim to represent farmers in the rural
region, but which have often been forced or paid to act in support of
drug cartels that have been warring over turf in Chiapas for months.
Having corrupt local police use the surveillance camera network to
report the movements of federal troops or state police would be valuable
to the farm groups and cartels, which often operate road blockades.
Comitan is located near the border with Guatemala, on a lucrative route
for immigrant smuggling.
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Chiapas has become so overrun by the Sinaloa cartel and the rival
Jalisco drug cartel — both of which also participate in migrants
smuggling and extortion — that some residents of Mexican towns have
been forced to flee to Guatemala for safety.
Chiapas Gov. Eduardo Ramírez Aguilar said the days of local
populations collaborating with criminal gangs are over.
“The days are over when they (the gangs) came in, took over, and
(said) 'go do this, go block that, go oppose the armed forces,”
Ramírez Aguilar said. That was an apparent reference to incidents in
several Chiapas towns where local residents took to the streets to
block army patrols and demand their withdrawal.
However, the cartel problem in Chiapas largely arose under former
governor Rutilio Escandón, who like Ramírez Aguilar is also a member
of the ruling Morena party. Escandón was recently appointed as
Mexico's consul in Miami, Florida.
Meanwhile, in the Gulf coast state of Veracruz, state prosecutors
said they had arrested 13 state police officers implicated in three
cases of forced disappearances. That is an offense in which
authorities abduct someone who vanishes without a trace.
Prosecutors in Veracruz did not provide details on the alleged
victims.
____
Alba Alemán reported from Xalapa, Mexico
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