Pages - Menu

Wednesday, February 3, 2021

5 Residents From Uruachi, Chihuahua, Killed by Cartel Members

 "MX" for Borderland Beat

The shooting occurred on a rural highway leading to Santisimo de Abajo, a village in Uruachi municipality. All of the perpetrators at large.

Violence in the state of Chihuahua is not only high but often merciless. Five residents from the indigenous  community of Santisimo de Abajo in the municipality of Uruachi, Chihuahua, were ambushed and killed by cartel members yesterday afternoon. They were driving home through a mountainous road when gunmen fired at them for unknown reasons. When authorities arrived at the scene, they found the corpses with bullet wounds and their Toyota truck on fire.


Three of the victims, Misael Elmer, Genaro Alex, and Mario Huber R. R., died at the scene before paramedics arrived. The last two were siblings. The driver and owner of the vehicle, Alan P. M., was gravely wounded and was taken a hospital in Cuauhtémoc municipality. However, he died before he was able to receive medical attention.


Uruachi is a small municipality in western Chihuahua, located on the heart of the Sierra Madre mountain. It has a population close to 2,000, most of them indigenous Tarahumara people. Since the start of Mexico’s drug war, Uruachi has been affected by cartel violence and illegal mining and logging. This convergence has added another layer to the cartel war in the region.


Uruachi is considered part of the Lower Sierra region in Chihuahua. This region has historically been under the control of Sinaloa Cartel-affiliated groups like Los Salazar.

Historically, Sinaloa Cartel-affiliated groups like Los Salazar have controlled Uruachi and other towns that are part of the Low Sierra municipalities. Groups once affiliated with the old Juarez Cartel, like La Linea, control most of the High Sierra municipalities. These criminal groups seek to control towns like Uruachi by infiltrating local party candidates and municipal police forces.


In 2011, residents in Uruachi began to arm themselves to protect their homes and families from a group of armed men who had surrounded the community. The mayor said that cartel members had posted themselves in the hills surrounding the area and were involved in a series of attacks that left several homes damaged, as reported by Borderland Beat.


The following year, security forces killed plaza boss Antonio Erives Arduño ("El Toño"), who headed a Sinaloa Cartel cell in Uruachi. He was competing with his former colleague Julio César Aguilar García ("El Vaquero"), former regional boss of La Linea. Borderland Beat reported that some local residents said that things were "calm" in Uruachi until La Linea arrived.

Source: Diario de Chihuaua; Letra RojaNoticias Chihuahua; LARR; Borderland Beat archives

8 comments:

  1. Just another day in paradise in Chihuahua.
    Don't blame one cartel thought. Both cartels and their gang followers arw fucking everything up there as well.
    One for being excessively violent the other for being fuckin greedy.
    So both asshole cartels are causing all the crap going on in state.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks BB for covering some of these remote areas in Chihuahua. I have family in El Paso and I feel connected to this area too. These are our brothers and sisters in Chihuahua.

    ReplyDelete
  3. La ____ killing innocent ppl. Or maybe Salazars for non compliance. Both are sad.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Salazares always blame la linea for their crimes like when they killed that Journalist in Chihuahua

      Delete
  4. Killing your own culture fucking idiots

    ReplyDelete
  5. When will this stop? War in Chihuahua has been ongoing since 2008 or so. 20 years from now? 30? 50? How much can we afford?

    ReplyDelete
  6. I believe this is los H cell of la Linea attacking salazares

    ReplyDelete
  7. I've heard el 40 from ncdj is the boss now for namiquipa and cuauhtemoc

    ReplyDelete

Comments are moderated, refer to policy for more information.
Envía fotos, vídeos, notas, enlaces o información
Todo 100% Anónimo;

borderlandbeat@gmail.com