Mexico's drug toll: 22,700 die
MORE than 22,700 people have been killed in Mexico's drug war since a US-backed military crackdown on cartels began more than three years ago, according to a government report.
The report said 2009 was the deadliest year in the drug war, with 9,635 people killed in violence tied to organized crime. That compares to 2,837 in 2007, the first year of President Felipe Calderon's military-led offensive.
Gang violence has continued surging this year, with 3,365 people killed between January and March, according to the confidential report sent to lawmakers, which The Associated Press saw on Tuesday.
In the latest violence, the bodies of six men were dumped on the side of a highway in Cuernavaca, a city near Mexico's capital where authorities say a battle has erupted for leadership of the Beltran Leyva cartel, whose leader was killed in a shootout with marines in December. Police said the six were tortured, then shot once in the head.
In the northern state of Tamaulipas, which borders Texas, gunmen burst into a bar and killed eight people on Monday night, the state government said.
Five died inside the bar in the town of Los Guerra and three were killed as they tried to flee in a car.
Tamaulipas has become the newest front in Mexico's drug war amid a split between the Gulf cartel and its former gang of hit men, the Zetas.
In the southern state of Guerrero, the bodies of two men were thrown from a bridge into a 525-meter deep canyon. State police said the men were found with their hands and feet tied and their heads wrapped in packing tape. Tape around the head, a tactic often used by drug cartels, usually kills a victim quickly by suffocation.
Calderon's United States-backed deployment of more than 40,000 soldiers and federal police has come under fire from opposition politicians and drug trade experts, who argue the crackdown has led to human rights abuses and done little to stem the flow of narcotics to the US.
The government attributes the increase in violence to gangs lashing back at security forces and infighting among cartels who have been shaken by the arrest of top kingpins.
More than 121,000 drug suspects have been detained since 2006, the report said. It gave no figure for how many had been convicted. More than half those arrested were from the Gulf and Sinaloa cartels, Mexico's two most powerful gangs.
The report said 2009 was the deadliest year in the drug war, with 9,635 people killed in violence tied to organized crime. That compares to 2,837 in 2007, the first year of President Felipe Calderon's military-led offensive.
Gang violence has continued surging this year, with 3,365 people killed between January and March, according to the confidential report sent to lawmakers, which The Associated Press saw on Tuesday.
In the latest violence, the bodies of six men were dumped on the side of a highway in Cuernavaca, a city near Mexico's capital where authorities say a battle has erupted for leadership of the Beltran Leyva cartel, whose leader was killed in a shootout with marines in December. Police said the six were tortured, then shot once in the head.
In the northern state of Tamaulipas, which borders Texas, gunmen burst into a bar and killed eight people on Monday night, the state government said.
Five died inside the bar in the town of Los Guerra and three were killed as they tried to flee in a car.
Tamaulipas has become the newest front in Mexico's drug war amid a split between the Gulf cartel and its former gang of hit men, the Zetas.
In the southern state of Guerrero, the bodies of two men were thrown from a bridge into a 525-meter deep canyon. State police said the men were found with their hands and feet tied and their heads wrapped in packing tape. Tape around the head, a tactic often used by drug cartels, usually kills a victim quickly by suffocation.
Calderon's United States-backed deployment of more than 40,000 soldiers and federal police has come under fire from opposition politicians and drug trade experts, who argue the crackdown has led to human rights abuses and done little to stem the flow of narcotics to the US.
The government attributes the increase in violence to gangs lashing back at security forces and infighting among cartels who have been shaken by the arrest of top kingpins.
More than 121,000 drug suspects have been detained since 2006, the report said. It gave no figure for how many had been convicted. More than half those arrested were from the Gulf and Sinaloa cartels, Mexico's two most powerful gangs.
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