AP/ May 15, 2011, 10:04 PM

Mass beheadings in Guatemala drug violence

Pro-migrant activists and Central American migrants participate in a Via Crucis as they cross the Suchiate River, near Ciudad Hidalgo, on the border of Guatemala and Mexico, Wednesday, April. 20, 2011. Mexican authorities say they have rescued 68 people, including 12 Central American migrants, allegedly kidnapped by a drug cartel in northern Mexico. The cross at right reads in Spanish "No more kidnaps."

Pro-migrant activists and Central American migrants participate in a Via Crucis as they cross the Suchiate River, near Ciudad Hidalgo, on the border of Guatemala and Mexico, Wednesday, April. 20, 2011. Mexican authorities say they have rescued 68 people, including 12 Central American migrants, allegedly kidnapped by a drug cartel in northern Mexico. The cross at right reads in Spanish "No more kidnaps." / AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo

GUATEMALA CITY - Assailants killed at least 27 people - decapitating most of the victims - on a ranch in a part of northern Guatemala plagued by drug cartels, national police said Sunday.

The massacre of the 25 men and two women took place early Sunday in the town of Caserio La Bomba in Peten province near the Mexico border, according to National Civil Police spokesman Donald Gonzalez.

It is one of the worst massacres since the end of Guatemala's 36-year civil war in 1996.

Gonzalez said police are investigating whether the attack is related to Saturday's killing in Peten of Haroldo Leon, the brother of alleged Guatemalan drug boss Juan Jose "Juancho" Leon.

"Juancho" Leon was killed in 2008 in an ambush that Guatemalan authorities blame on Mexico's Zetas drug cartel, which has increasingly wrested control of the drug trade beyond Mexico, at times by eliminating their competition. Ten others were killed in the 2008 attack.

Guatemalan authorities said police and soldiers were searching the area on Sunday for the unidentified attackers and didn't offer a motive for the attack.

"This is a terrible event that we must clarify and investigate regardless of the consequences, whoever is the author of this massacre," said Guatemala Prosecutor General Claudia Paz y Paz.

Guatemala has become a major shipment point for drugs heading north to the United States.

In February, the government lifted a two-month-long state of siege that it had declared in Alta Verapaz province, which neighbors Peten province, during which security forces were sent to quell drug-related violence.

The state of siege gave the army emergency powers - including permission to detain suspects without warrants - and resulted in the arrest of at least 20 suspected members of the Zetas gang.

The Zetas are a group of ex-soldiers who began as hit men for Mexico's Gulf drug cartel before breaking off on their own, quickly becoming one of Mexico's most violent gangs and spreading a reign of terror into Central America. They are notorious for their brutality, including beheading rivals and officials. Authorities have linked them to a series of massacres and mass graves in northern Mexico.

The Zetas began controlling cocaine trafficking in the Alta Verapaz region in 2008 after killing "Juancho" Leon.

© 2011 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
5 Comments Add a Comment
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us_1776 says:
This is the type of violence that prohibitions always generate.

Just look at the 1930's in the U.S. Criminal booze lords were gunning down rivals with automatic weapons right on America's city streets. Does that sound at all familiar?

And when the prohibition of the 1930's ended so did all of the killings, violence and criminal gangs.


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difiyah says:
Pop Quiz: Who ousted the democratically elected govt. and installed the parasites in cahoots with the drug gangs?
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credibility2 says:
Let all of the drug-infested nations of savages rot themselves into oblivion.
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us_1776 replies:
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cred, that would be the U.S.

We are the Number 1 consumer of drugs in the world.

And we need to stop the prohibition and end all the black markets.

If people want to use drugs that is a matter of personal choice. At least if the drugs are legal and cheap and available locally you don't have massive violent criminal gangs running black markets and killing tens of thousands of people annually.


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reluctantzealot says:
Did Eric Holder sell them their knives?
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