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Mexico gunbattle near Texas border kills nearly two dozen

An hour-long gunfight between Mexican cartel members and police has left 21 people dead near the border of Texas, including four police officers.

Aftermath of deadly gunbattle in Villa Unión, Mexico

Four police officers were among nearly two dozen people killed after security forces engaged in an hour-long gunbattle with suspected cartel members.

The incident took place Saturday (US time) in a Mexican town near the US border, days after President Trump said he was moving to designate Mexican drug cartels as terror organisations.

The shootout happened around noon in the small town of Villa Union, a town in Coahuila state located about an hour’s drive southwest of Eagle Pass, Texas.

Coahuila state Gov. Miguel Angel Riquelme told local media that four of the dead were police officers killed in the initial confrontation and that several municipal workers were missing.

On Sunday, the Coahuila state government said that security forces killed seven additional members of the gang, bringing the death toll to at least 21, Fox News reports

A damaged pick up marked with the initials C.D.N., that in Spanish stand for Cartel of the Northeast, is on the streets after a gunbattle between Mexican security forces and suspected cartel gunmen. Picture: AP
A damaged pick up marked with the initials C.D.N., that in Spanish stand for Cartel of the Northeast, is on the streets after a gunbattle between Mexican security forces and suspected cartel gunmen. Picture: AP

The armed group of suspected cartel members stormed the town of 3,000 residents in a convoy of trucks, attacking local government offices and prompting state and federal forces to intervene.

Ten alleged members of the Cartel of the Northeast were initially killed in the response.

Riquelme told reporters the state had acted “decisively” to take back the town, as videos of the shootout posted on social media showed burnt-out vehicles and the facade of Villa Union’s municipal office riddled with bullets.

A damaged black pick-up truck with the C.D.N. of the Cartel del Noreste, or Cartel of the Northeast, written in white on its door could be seen on the street in an Associated Press photo.

Residents stand in front of a home riddled with bullet holes after a gunbattle between Mexican security forces and suspected cartel gunmen, in Villa Union, Mexico. Picture: AP
Residents stand in front of a home riddled with bullet holes after a gunbattle between Mexican security forces and suspected cartel gunmen, in Villa Union, Mexico. Picture: AP

Riquelme told reporters that police had identified 14 vehicles involved in the attack and seized more than a dozen guns.

Three of the suspected gunmen were killed by security forces in the initial pursuit of the gang members as they fled into rugged terrain, according to Reuters.

In the wake of the assault, the governor said that security forces will remain in the town for several days to restore a sense of calm. The town is about 12 miles from the site of a 2011 cartel massacre where officials say 70 died.

“These groups won’t be allowed to enter state territory,” the government of Coahuila said in a statement.

Mexico’s murder rate has increased to historically high levels, inching up by 2 per cent in the first 10 months of the presidency of Andrés Manuel López Obrador. Federal officials said recently that there have been 29,414 homicides so far in 2019 – up from 28,869 over the same period last year.

A damaged vehicle is parked at the City Hall of Villa Union, Mexico, after a gunbattle between Mexican security forces and suspected cartel gunmen. Picture: AP
A damaged vehicle is parked at the City Hall of Villa Union, Mexico, after a gunbattle between Mexican security forces and suspected cartel gunmen. Picture: AP

The release of the figures comes at a time when López Obrador is facing growing criticism for his government’s “hugs, not bullets” policy of not using violence when fighting violent drug cartels.

In early November, Mexico made international headlines when a drug cartel ambush killed nine Americans, focusing world attention on rising violence in the country.

The three women and six children -- all members of dual-citizen families that lived in La Mora, a decades-old settlement in the Sonora State founded as part of an offshoot of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints -- were on their way to see relatives in the US when they were targeted about 70 miles south of Douglas, Ariz., by cartel members.

A wall of the room of a home is riddled with bullet holes after a gunbattle between Mexican security forces and suspected cartel gunmen, in Villa Union, Mexico. Picture: AP Photo
A wall of the room of a home is riddled with bullet holes after a gunbattle between Mexican security forces and suspected cartel gunmen, in Villa Union, Mexico. Picture: AP Photo

At the time, Trump called on Mexico to “wage war” on the cartels. He told author and former Fox News Channel host Bill O’Reilly in an interview posted last week his administration is “well into that process” to designate drug cartels as terror organisations. While the president did not indicate how the U.S. policy would change from past years, Trump said he told López Obrador that the U.S. stands ready to “go in and clean it out.”

On Friday -- the day before the deadly gunbattle -- Mexico’s president said he would not accept any foreign intervention in Mexico to deal with violent criminal gangs after Trump’s comments.

Coahuila Governor Miguel Riquelme Solis, right, talks to a woman who said her son was missing after a gunbattle between Mexican security forces and suspected cartel gunmen in Villa Union, Mexico. Picture: AP Photo
Coahuila Governor Miguel Riquelme Solis, right, talks to a woman who said her son was missing after a gunbattle between Mexican security forces and suspected cartel gunmen in Villa Union, Mexico. Picture: AP Photo

Riquelme on Saturday made similar comments to Lopez Obrador on how Mexico should handle the problem.

“I don’t think that Mexico needs intervention. I think Mexico needs collaboration and co-operation,” he told reporters. “We’re convinced that the state has the power to overcome the criminals.”

A damaged pick up is on the streets after a bloody battle between Mexican security forces and suspected cartel gunmen, in Villa Union, Mexico. Picture: AP Photo
A damaged pick up is on the streets after a bloody battle between Mexican security forces and suspected cartel gunmen, in Villa Union, Mexico. Picture: AP Photo

U.S. Attorney-General William Barr is scheduled to visit Mexico this week to discuss co-operation over security, according to Reuters.

Fox News’ Greg Norman, Edmund DeMarche and the Associated Press contributed to this report.

This story first appeared on Fox News and has been republished here with permission.

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Original URL: https://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/mexico-gunbattle-near-texas-border-kills-nearly-two-dozen/news-story/e214585f443431597f480033d5ce5ef0