'Drug gangs' in Mexico border cities burn vehicles, set blockades

Dozens of vehicles torched in multiple cities as gang violence hits the North American country third time in week.

The area around Tijuana city has become a battle ground between various gangs, including the Jalisco and Sinaloa cartels.
Reuters

The area around Tijuana city has become a battle ground between various gangs, including the Jalisco and Sinaloa cartels.

The Mexican border cities of Tijuana and Mexicali along with Rosarito and Ensenada have been hit by gang violence that included vehicles being set ablaze and road blockades.

The US Consulate in Tijuana on Saturday instructed its employees "to shelter in place until further notice" around midnight because of late Friday's violence.

It was the third time this week Mexican cities have seen widespread arson and shootings by drug cartels. The gangs appear to be targeting stores, vehicles and innocent bystanders in response to disputes or attempts to capture gang members.

Baja California state officials said a total of 24 vehicles had been hijacked and burned at different points throughout the state: 15 in Tijuana, three in Rosarito, and two each in Mexicali, Ensenada, and Tecate.

The federal public safety department said one person was wounded in the violence and that federal, state and local forces had detained 17 suspects, including seven in Tijuana, and four each in Rosarito and Mexicali.

READ MORE: Mexico seizes 1.6 tonnes of cocaine in capital

Drug cartel violence

Tijuana mayor Montserrat Caballero issued a public appeal to "organised crime," the term used in Mexico for drug cartels, to stop the growing trend of targeting innocent civilians.

"Today we are saying to the organised crime groups that are committing these crimes, that Tijuana is going to remain open and take care of its citizens," Caballero said in a video, "and we also ask them to settle their debts with those who didn’t pay what they owe, not with families and hard-working citizens."

On Saturday, few people ventured out on the streets in Tijuana and many of the bus and passenger van services stopped running, leaving some residents unable to get where they were going.

"Let them fight it out among themselves, but leave us alone," said Tijuana resident Blanca Estela Fuentes, as she looked for some means of public transport. "So they kill each other, they can do whatever they want, but the public, why are we to blame?"

Later on Saturday, Caballero, the Tijuana mayor, said some bus and van routes had resumed service.

The area around Tijuana, which borders US state of California, is a lucrative drug-trafficking corridor long dominated by the Arellano Felix cartel but which has since become a battle ground between various gangs, including the Jalisco and Sinaloa cartels.

READ MORE: Mexico captures FBI's 'most wanted' drug leader Rafael Caro Quintero

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