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MEXICO CITY: At least 71 people have gone missing this year on a highway between Mexicos industrial hub of Monterrey and the border city of Nuevo Laredo, authorities said Wednesday.
Earlier estimates by relatives of the victims at least half a dozen of whom are U.S. residents had placed the number of disappeared so far this year at around 50.
The head of Mexicos National Search Commission, Karla Quintana, said most of the missing are men who drove trucks or taxis on a road that local media have dubbed the highway of death.
Quintana said investigations are focusing on a point near where the highway enters Nuevo Laredo, which has long been dominated by the Northeast drug cartel. Quintana said the disappearances may be related to turf battles between the Jalisco and Northeast cartels.
But the missing also include women and children and men driving private cars.
The FBI office in San Antonio, Texas, has issued a bulletin seeking information on the disappearance of a Laredo, Texas, woman, Gladys Perez Snchez, and her 16-year-old son and 9-year-old daughter, who were last seen setting out on the highway June 13. They had visited relatives in Sabinas Hidalgo, a town on the highway, and were returning to Texas in their car when they vanished.
In recent months, activists say about a half dozen men have reappeared alive and badly beaten after being abducted on the highway, and all they will say is that armed men forced them to stop on the highway and took their vehicles.
Despite alerts from relatives of the missing, the state government of Nuevo Leon, where Monterrey is located, didnt warn people against traveling on the highway until almost a month later, on June 23. Authorities have since increased policing and security on the highway, and are searching for the missing.
The disappearances, and the June shooting of 15 apparently innocent bystanders in the border city of Reynosa, suggest Mexico is returning to the dark days of the 2006-2012 drug war when cartel gunmen often targeted the general public as well as one another.
Its no longer between the cartels; they are attacking the public, said activist Angelica Orozco.
Officials in the early 2000s were often quick to repeat an old belief that drug cartels only killed each other, not innocent civilians, a belief that apparently hasn’t completely died.
On Wednesday, Assistant Interior Secretary Alejandro Encinas said that almost 80% of present-day killings are associated with criminal activities.
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