
Gunmen kill seven in central Mexico
The attack in the central state of Guanajuato occurred at around 2:00 am Monday in a plaza in the city of San Felipe where local police found seven bodies, all male, and a damaged van after reports of gunfire, the local government said in a statement.
The officers also found two banners with messages alluding to the Santa Rosa de Lima gang, which operates in the area, the statement said.
Guanajuato is a thriving industrial hub and home to several popular tourist destinations, but it is also Mexico's deadliest state, according to official homicide statistics.
The violent crime is linked to conflict between the Santa Rosa de Lima gang and the Jalisco New Generation cartel, one of the most powerful in the Latin American nation.
Mexican leaders of the Catholic Church condemned the shooting on Monday, calling it 'an alarming sign of the weakening of the social fabric, impunity and the absence of peace in vast regions' of the country, which is majority Catholic.
'We cannot remain indifferent in the face of the spiral of violence that is wounding so many communities,' the Episcopal Conference of Mexico, an organization of Mexican bishops, added in a statement.
The shooting was 'one more among so many that are repeated with painful frequency,' it said.
In December, the Church in Mexico called on warring cartels to declare a truce.
Guanajuato recorded the most homicides of any state in Mexico last year, with 3,151, 10.5 percent of murders nationwide, according to official figures.
Since 2006, when the military launched an anti-drug operation, Mexico has tallied about 480,000 violent deaths.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Al Arabiya
09-07-2025
- Al Arabiya
A Mexican court sentences 10 men to 141 years each in a cartel-run recruitment ranch
A Mexican court sentenced ten men to 141-year prison terms each for their involvement in a Jalisco ranch used by the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) to recruit members, kill, and disappear victims. The discovery earlier this year of the Izaguirre ranch, used by the CJNG since 2021, sparked alarm and fear across the region. The ten men were arrested in September 2024 during an initial raid. They were convicted of the disappearance and murder of three victims and ordered to pay 1.3 million pesos (about $65,000) in restitution to the victims' families. Five other suspects await trial, including three municipal police officers, a CJNG operative, and Teuchitlan's mayor, José Murguía Santiago. Murguía Santiago was arrested after Mexico's Attorney General revealed that since 2021, the Jalisco state Human Rights Commission had alerted Teuchitlan authorities about the ranch but was ignored. The case sparked controversy after Guerreros Buscadores de Jalisco, a group that searches for missing persons, reported finding numerous charred human bones, clothing, and shoes at the site in March. This highlighted the violence and impunity in cartel-plagued areas and the tragedy of Mexico's 130,000 missing people. Following the report, it emerged that Jalisco state prosecutors delayed the investigation for several months after the initial raid, when the National Guard intervened and arrested the ten men. One body and two of the later-detained men were found on the ranch. Due to missteps by state authorities, the federal Attorney General's Office took over the case. In late April, Attorney General Alejandro Gertz Manero dismissed claims of cremation sites at Rancho Izaguirre, fueling backlash from activists. Guerreros Buscadores de Jalisco responded, saying it recovered seventeen sets of charred human bone remains, now in the custody of forensics teams.


Al Arabiya
04-07-2025
- Al Arabiya
Mexico President Sheinbaum Hopes Deported Boxer Chávez Jr. Will Serve Time in Mexico
Mexico President Claudia Sheinbaum said Friday that Mexico hadn't previously arrested boxer Julio César Chávez Jr. on a 2023 arrest order because he had been mostly in the US since. Sheinbaum spoke a day after US authorities announced the boxer's arrest in California for overstaying his visa and lying on a green card application. He was being processed for expedited removal, according to US authorities. 'The hope is that he will be deported and serve the sentence in Mexico,' Sheinbaum said during her daily news briefing Friday, referring to charges that Chávez faces for arms and drug trafficking. The 39-year-old boxer, according to his attorney, Michael Goldstein, was picked up Wednesday by a large number of federal agents while he was riding a scooter in front of a home where he resides in the upscale Los Angeles neighborhood of Studio City near Hollywood. The arrest came only days after the former middleweight champion lost a match against influencer-turned-boxer Jake Paul in Anaheim, California. Chávez split his time between both countries. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers detained Chávez for overstaying a tourist visa that he entered the US with in August 2023 and expired in February 2024, the US Department of Homeland Security said. The agency also said Chávez submitted multiple fraudulent statements when he applied for permanent residency on April 2, 2024, based on his marriage to a US citizen, Frida Muñoz. She is the mother of a granddaughter of imprisoned Sinaloa cartel kingpin Joaquín 'El Chapo' Guzmán. US officials said that he's believed to have ties to the powerful Sinaloa Cartel, which is blamed for a significant portion of Mexico's drug violence.


Al Arabiya
04-07-2025
- Al Arabiya
Who is Julio César Chávez Jr., the Mexican boxer facing deportation from the US?
Julio César Chávez, considered the best Mexican boxer in history, fathered three children. His firstborn carried his name and came the closest to duplicating his success in the ring. Julio César Chávez Jr., who was arrested in Los Angeles by federal immigration agents on Thursday for overstaying his visa, grew up traveling with his younger brother, Omar, to watch their dad's fights. The elder Chávez won world titles in three weight classes in the 1980s and 1990s and became a sporting icon in Mexico, where he remains revered. Chávez Jr. and Omar began learning the sport at a young age. The younger Chávez, who's now 39, fought as an amateur at age 11 against Jorge 'Maromerito' Páez, the son of another Mexican fighter, Jorge Páez. Chávez made his professional debut at age 17, beating Jonathan Hernandez in a six-round bout in his hometown of Culiacan. 'The Son of a Legend,' as he was called in Mexico, went 23–0 to start his career before a draw against Carlos Molina in 2005. Although Omar also fought as a professional, 'Julito' was more talented, and he won his first title in 2009 – in the World Boxing Council Latino super featherweight division. That year, Chávez tested positive for a banned substance after his fight with Troy Rowland in Las Vegas. He received a seven-month suspension in Nevada. A year later, he won the vacant WBC silver middleweight crown, defeating John Duddy by unanimous decision. On June 4, 2011, Chávez reached the pinnacle of his career when he won the WBC middleweight title, defeating Sebastian Zbik by majority decision at the Staples Center in Los Angeles. He successfully defended the crown three times: edging Peter Manfredo Jr. by technical knockout, winning by unanimous decision over Marco Rubio, and defeating Andy Lee, also by TKO. Against Rubio, Chávez struggled to make weight. Chávez's first pay-per-view bout came in 2012 at age 26 against Sergio 'Maravilla' Martinez of Argentina, who was 37 at the time. Martinez, who had won world titles in two weight classes, defeated Chávez by unanimous decision, and the Mexican's record fell to 46–1–1. After the fight, Chávez was suspended for nine months and fined $900,000 by the Nevada State Athletic Commission after he tested positive for marijuana. After the loss to Martinez, Chávez struggled to regain his prior form and fought just five times in five years. Chávez had another high-profile opportunity in 2017 when he fought Canelo Alvarez in Las Vegas in his second pay-per-view fight. The bout was highly anticipated in Mexico, pitting one of the country's most popular fighters in Alvarez against the 'Son of a Legend,' who lost by unanimous decision. After the loss to Alvarez, Chávez's struggles with addiction became evident, and his relationship with his father deteriorated. He stopped fighting for two years, returning to win a minor bout in Guadalajara. In 2019, Chávez lost to former middleweight champion Daniel Jacobs in Las Vegas. After that, he fought again in Mexico, including a loss to former mixed martial arts champion Anderson Silva by split decision in 2021. Chávez spent the next three years away from the ring and drew attention for TikTok videos in which he accused his father of various forms of abuse. In January of last year, Los Angeles police arrested Chávez and charged him with illegal possession of an assault weapon, among other offenses. After that, Chávez claimed to have completed a rehabilitation program and was ready to get back in the ring. He defeated Uriah Hall in Tampa, Florida, last July before losing to YouTuber-turned-boxer Jake Paul last weekend in Anaheim, California.