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Gun battle kills 15 in northern Mexico

Police are seen outside the house where six people, including a four-month-old baby, were killed by gunmen in San Pedro Cacahuatepec, Acapulco municipality, Guerrero state, Mexico, on June 9, 2017. (Photo by AFP)

At least 15 people died Wednesday in a shootout between police and two rival drug gangs in northern Mexico, authorities said.

The pre-dawn battle near the remote town of Las Varas started as a firefight between rival drug trafficking gangs, then escalated when police arrived, said Eduardo Esparza of the prosecutor's office for the state of Chihuahua, which borders the United States.

The region is hotly disputed territory for Mexico's drug cartels because its mountainous terrain and proximity to the border make it a strategic corridor for shipping narcotics to the US.

Investigators believe the groups involved in the shootout were "La Linea" — the armed wing of the Juarez cartel — and hitmen from the powerful Sinaloa cartel, Esparza told AFP.

This file photo, taken on February 19, 2017, shows a US Border Patrol agent checking the area near the border fence in Columbus, New Mexico, on the US-Mexico border. (By AFP)

Fifteen people died all from the drug gangs, and five more were arrested, state police chief Oscar Aparicio told Radio Formula.

It was the latest in a series of deadly clashes between police, rival drug gangs, and warring factions within the Sinaloa cartel, which has been in turmoil since its kingpin, Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, was extradited to the United States in January.

Last Friday, 17 gunmen were killed in a spectacular shootout with police on a highway in Sinaloa, the northwestern state that is the Guzman cartel's home base.

May was the deadliest month in Mexico since the government began keeping track in 1997, with 2,186 homicides.

(Source: AFP)


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