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Mexico deals biggest blow to drug mafia
Troops kill No 3 in country's biggest cartel
- Image Credit: AP
- Mexico's army general Edgar Villegas announces the death of Mexican drug cartel leader Ignacio 'Nacho' Coronel.
Mexico City: Soldiers killed a top leader of the Sinaloa cartel in a raid on his posh hideout, dealing the biggest blow yet to Mexico's most powerful drug gang since President Felipe Calderon launched a military offensive against organised crime in 2006.
Ignacio ‘Nacho' Coronel, a reputed founder of Mexico's methamphetamine trade, was gunned down trying to escape soldiers in the western city of Guadalajara. Mexican authorities says he fired on soldiers as helicopters hovered overhead and troops closed in.
Coronel was a close associate of Mexico's most wanted man, Sinaloa cartel leader Joaquin ‘El Chapo' Guzman, and was No. 3 in the organisation after Ismael ‘El Mayo' Zambada.
"Nacho Coronel tried to escape, and fired on military personnel, killing one soldier and wounding another," general Edgar Luis Villegas said at a news conference in Mexico City. "Responding to the attack, this ‘capo' died."
The raid "significantly affects the operational capacity and drug distribution of the organisation run by Guzman", he added.
Downfall
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Coronel's downfall came amid persistent allegations that Calderon's administration appeared to be favouring the Sinaloa cartel, or not hitting it as hard as other drug gangs.
Those allegations have drawn angry denials from the president and his top law enforcement officials, who point to the 2009 arrest of Vicente ‘El Vicentillo' Zambada — the son of Ismael Zambada — as proof they were going after the gang.
Coronel's death was also the biggest strike against Mexican cartels since drug lord Arturo Beltran Leyva and six of his bodyguards were killed in a December 16 raid by Mexican marines in the central city of Cuernavaca. Beltran Leyva, whose gang was once allied with the Sinaloa cartel, had become an enemy of Guzman's organisation by the time of his death.
The mysterious Coronel was believed to be "the forerunner in producing massive amounts of methamphetamine in clandestine laboratories in Mexico, then smuggling it into the US", according to the FBI, which offered a $5 million (Dh18.3 million) reward for the 56-year-old.
Coronel allegedly controlled trafficking through the Mexican states of Jalisco, Colima and parts of Michoacan — the ‘Pacific route' for cocaine smuggling.
Video broadcasts sought as ransom
Gunmen who abducted four journalists in northern Mexico are demanding their media outlets broadcast videos apparently taped by a drug cartel that accuse officials of favouring a rival gang.
Drug gangs often kill, threaten or beat journalists to intimidate them and stop them from covering drug-related stories but kidnapping them to force newspapers and television stations to publish their messages is a never-before-seen tactic.
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