Sixteen held over mass graves in Mexico

A Mexico City police officer guards a refrigerated truck carrying bodies that were found in mass graves in northern Mexico.

A Mexico City police officer guards a refrigerated truck carrying bodies that were found in mass graves in northern Mexico.

Published Apr 15, 2011

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Mexico City - Mexican authorities have arrested 16 police officers suspected of protecting four people wanted for the massacre of at least 126 people in a northern border state.

Attorney General Marisela Morales said the police were from San Fernando, Tamaulipas, where authorities have unearthed mass graves holding the bodies of 126 people.

The police are alleged to have been protecting four people - three men and woman - who authorities believe were directly responsible for the killings.

The victims apparently were passengers on public buses running routes through San Fernando to Reynosa and Matamoros, two Mexican cities on the border with the United States.

The massacres have been blamed on the Los Zetas drug cartel, a notorious gang headed by ex-military commandos who turned to drug trafficking, kidnappings, extortion and other crimes.

“The federal government reiterates its commitment to solve these lamentable and reprehensible homicides, and end the corruption of the police force which has made a pact with organised crime,” Morales said in a statement overnight on Thursday.

Authorities had previously arrested 17 people linked to Los Zetas. The government offered a $3.8-million reward for information leading to the capture of the four chief suspects.

Meanwhile, 70 of the bodies recovered so far were transported on Thursday to Mexico City to further the identification process, a justice official told AFP.

“They have been taken for embalming and analysis by the Forensic Medical Service,” the spokesperson told AFP.

The bodies had been transported from Matamoros, in the state of Tamaulipas, where the remaining 56 bodies were still kept. Dozens of people in Matamoros, across the border from Brownsville, Texas, were waiting to see whether their missing relatives had been found in the mass graves.

Authorities believe most of the victims were Mexicans, although at least one Guatemalan was confirmed among the dead.

San Fernando was the same municipality where Los Zetas last year kidnapped and slaughtered 73 immigrants from Central and South America on their way north to try to illegally cross into the United States.

Seven major drug gangs are operating in Mexico, and over 34 600 people have been killed since December 2006 in violence related to raging wars for control of smuggling routes and government efforts to stamp them out.

On Thursday, authorities found the bodies of eight men, heaped in a pile and with signs of torture and gunshots to the head, in the western state of Michoacan, officials there said.

Michoacan, among Mexico's most violent states, is the stronghold of La Familia, the drug cartel considered the country's largest producer and trafficker of illicit synthetic drugs bound for the United States. - Sapa-AFP

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