MEXICO CITY — Two mayoral candidates in Mexico were found dead Friday, bringing to 17 the number of contenders slain in the lead-up to the June 2 election.
One candidate was killed Friday in the northern Mexico border state of Tamaulipas. NoƩ Ramos Ferretiz was running for a coalition of the opposition National Action Party and Institutional Revolutionary Party, which had governed Mexico until 2000. He was running for reelection as mayor of the city of Ciudad Mante.
Another mayoral candidate in the southern state of Oaxaca was found dead a day after he was reported missing. Alberto GarcĆa was running for mayor of the Oaxaca town of San JosĆ© Independencia.
The June 2 national elections that are shaping up to be the countryās most violent on record.
Prosecutors in Tamaulipas said Ramos Ferretiz was attacked on Friday, but did not give details beyond saying theyāre investigating.
Local media reported he had been stabbed and posted photos showing a bloodied body lying on a sidewalk. Tamaulipas has long been riven by drug cartel turf wars. Ciudad Mante is located in the southern part of the state, relatively far from border cities like Reynosa and Matamoros.
āWe will not allow violence to decide these elections,ā PRI party leader Alejandro Moreno wrote on social media, where he confirmed the ācowardly assassinationā of Ramos Ferretiz.
In Oaxaca, the state electoral board condemned the death of GarcĆa, who went missing along with his wife ā the current mayor of San JosĆ© Independencia ā earlier this week. The wife was found alive.
The electoral board called GarcĆa’s death a ākilling,ā and said such crimes āshould not occur during elections.ā
In early April, mayoral candidate Bertha GaytƔn was gunned down, hours after she requested protection and started campaigning. GaytƔn was fatally shot on a street in a town outside the city of Celaya, in the north-central state of Guanajuato. She had just launched her campaign for Celaya mayor.
Mexicoās drug cartels have often focused assassination attempts on mayors and mayoral candidates, in a bid to control local police or extort money from municipal governments.
President AndrĆ©s Manuel LĆ³pez Obrador acknowledged in early April that drug cartels often seek to determine who will serve as mayor ā either by running their own candidate or eliminating potential rivals.
āThey make an agreement and say, āthis person is going to be mayor; we donāt want anyone else to register to run,ā and anybody who does, well, they knowā what to expect, he said.
The recent slayings have prompted the government to provide bodyguards for about 250 candidates, but those running for municipal positions ā while the most endangered ā are the last in line for security.
Violence against politicians is widespread in Mexico. In early April, the mayor of Churumuco, a town in the neighboring state of MichoacƔn, was shot to death at a taco restaurant in the state capital, Morelia.
In late February in another town in MichoacƔn, two mayoral hopefuls were shot to death within hours of each other.
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