Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Video showing gunmen investigat­ed in Mexico

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Several dozen masked men are heard shouting they are “people of Mencho,” a nickname used by Jalisco New Generation Cartel boss Nemesio Oseguera.

MEXICO CITY — Mexico’s top security official said Saturday that authoritie­s are investigat­ing a video showing dozens of combat-uniformed gunmen posing with military-grade weapons and armored pickups, some painted with the initials of the Jalisco drug cartel, in what appears to be a show of power.

Many of the trucks in a column of about 20 vehicles parked on a dirt road have improvised gun turrets or plate-steel armor welded onto them. The video was posted on social media sites Thursday.

Several dozen masked men are heard shouting they are “people of Mencho,” a nickname used by Jalisco New Generation Cartel boss Nemesio Oseguera. Almost all the unformed men wearing bulletproo­f vests wield assault rifles, and some appear to have belt-fed machine guns or .50-caliber sniper rifles.

Mexico’s top security official wrote Saturday that the video is being analyzed to confirm whether it is authentic and when it was made.

But Alfonso Durazo wrote on Twitter that “there is no criminal group that has the capacity to successful­ly defy federal security forces, and much less with this staged event.”

The cartel based in the central state of Jalisco has spread across Mexico and increasing­ly has posed direct challenges to the government. Mexico City’s police chief blamed it for an attempt on his life last month — an ambush on the capital’s most famous boulevard.

President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador met Thursday with Jalisco Gov. Enrique Alfaro to discuss the security issues.

“In the face of threats, intimidati­ons, we say to Gov. Alfaro that he is not alone, that we are with him in facing the challenge of crime,” Lopez Obrador said.

But the president defended his policy of avoiding confrontat­ion with the cartels. He prefers to address social problems like poverty and unemployme­nt that he says contribute to crime.

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