Following
Mota's killing, two suspects were killed in a clash with police and three
others arrested. Officials said those taken into custody were a 32-year-old
woman, an 18-year-old man and a minor.
They gave few other details, though
state Attorney General Javier Perez Duron said the suspects had been tied to
other crimes.
Three people, including a
minor, were being held Sunday in the slaying of a newly inaugurated mayor just
hours into her term in a gang-troubled central Mexican city.
Morelos Gov. Graco Ramirez
ordered flags on state buildings flown at half-staff and called for three days
of mourning following the killing of Temixco Mayor Gisela Mota.
He blamed organized crime
for killing the 33-year-old Mota, a former federal congresswoman who had been
sworn in as mayor the day before she was gunned down in her home Saturday
morning.
Ramirez ordered security
measures for all of the state's mayors, though he gave no details on what that
involved.
Ramon Castro Castro, Roman
Catholic bishop of Cuernavaca, celebrated Mass at Mota's home Sunday and later
spoke critically of a state where some areas are in control of organized crime.
"One theory could be
that it was a warning to the other mayors," Castro said to reporters.
"If you don't cooperate with organized crime, look at what will happen to
you. It's to scare them."
Temixco, with about 100,000
people, is a suburb of Cuernavaca, a city famed among tourists for its colonial
center, gardens and jacaranda-decked streets. "The city of eternal
spring" was long a favorite weekend getaway for people from nearby Mexico
City.
But drug and extortion
gangs have plagued the area in recent years, driving away some tourists and
residents. The expressway — and drug routes — between Mexico City and the
country's murder capital of Acapulco cuts through Cuernavaca and Temixco.
Neither the governor nor
prosecutors indicated which criminal organization might be involved in the
mayor's slaying.
Drugs, kidnappings and
extortion in the area were once under the control of the Beltran Leyva cartel,
but that group's collapse a few years ago unleashed fierce competition among
its progeny and rivals in Morelos and neighboring Guerrero and Mexico states.
In December 2014, a state
lawmaker who was a candidate for mayor of Temixco from the same party as Mota,
was kidnapped there. Authorities rescued him the following day and blamed the
Guerreros Unidos cartel, which has been clashing with a group known as Los
Rojos in Guerrero and Morelos.
Temixco also saw one of
Mexico's emblematic killings of the past decade: The 24-year-old son of poet
Javier Sicilia and six other people were found slain in March 2011, prompting
the writer to start a nationwide movement against violence. Prosecutors said
the seven apparently had gotten into an argument with men who turned out to be
local members of the Pacifico Sur drug cartel.
Efforts to clean out
corrupt local police who have protected gangs led Morelos to put officers under
a unified state command in 2014. Temixco joined that system, though the state's
main city, Cuernavaca, has resisted.
Yahoo News
So sad
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