Mexico: Hopes that the recent arrest of a Mexican gang leader could calm the country's most violent state appeared have dashed as the bullet-ridden bodies of seven men were found in a field and a rival drug cartel announced it was moving in.
The central state of Guanajuato has been the scene of over 9,000 killings since the Santa Rosa de Lima gang and the rival Jalisco cartel started a turf war for control of the industrial state around 2017.
There were hopes the violence might subside after the Aug. 2 arrest of Santa Rosa gang leader Jos Antonio Ypez Ortiz, better known by his nickname El Marro, which means The Sledgehammer.
But on Saturday, Guanajuato officials confirmed that the bodies of seven men with multiple gunshot wounds were found dumped on the side of a road near the Jercuaro, near the state's border with Michoacan. Authorities said they found spent shell casings from assault rifles and pistols at the scene, suggesting the men had been killed there.
Also Saturday, a video was posted on social media showing about two dozen men dressed in military-style fatigues and armed with assault rifles, .50-caliber sniper rifles and at least two belt-fed machine guns.
The men claim in the video to be members of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, the rival of the Santa Rosa gang that has sought to move into Guanajuato.
We know that there are still people from this gang of killers of innocents, a cartel spokesman says in the video, a reference to remaining Santa Rosa gang members.
They will also fall. The best thing they can do is run. The video promises that once the Santa Rosa gang is gone, peace will return to Guanajuato under Jalisco New Generation, which is Mexico's most violent and fastest-growing cartel.
Today, the Cartel Jalisco New Generation makes the promise to you, the people of Guanajuato, and to the authorities, that it will keep the state in peace and tranquillity, the spokesman said.