Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Fed Up with Abductions, Mexican Townsfolk Kidnap Gang Boss' Mother

Darpan News Desk IANS, 17 Dec, 2016 03:05 PM
    After seeing many of their loved ones kidnapped by a ruthless drug cartel, the people of Totolapan, a small town in Mexico's Guerrero state decided it was time to fight fire with fire, so they kidnapped the drug boss' mother.
     
    For years, Totolapan has been under the control of a gang known as "Los Tequillero", led by Raybel Jacobo de Almonte, better known as "El Tequillero". Things had gotten considerably worse for the locals in recent months, as the Tequilleros had become involved in a turf war with other gangs, and started abducting people whom they suspected were supporting their rivals. Sick of living under the constant terror of having their loved ones taken from them, the townsfolk decided to fight back.
     
    On Monday, a few dozen masked men appeared in the streets of Totolapan waving rifles and shotguns, and calling for action against El Tequillero. They identified themselves as a "self-defense" force, as Mexican vigilantes usually call themselves, and demanded the release of kidnapping victims taken by the gang.
     
    "We urgently demand the release of the kidnap victims," one of the masked men said during a recorded statement. "We are a legitimate self-defense force of the people." And to make sure that their demands are taken seriously by the Tequilleros, they let them know that they have a valuable bargaining chip.
     
    "We have your mother here, Mr. Tequilero. I propose an exchange: I'll give you your mother if you give me my husband, but I want him safe and sound," said the wife of Isauro de la Paz Duque, a local construction engineer that was kidnapped by the gang last week, after they had threatened to kill him.
     
    El Tequillero's mother, who is shown sitting on the floor of an empty room with just a ventilation fan beside her, is just one of two dozen people kidnapped by the vigilantes as suspected members of the drug gang.
     
    The Guerrero state Government recently sent 220 soldiers and policemen to Totolapan to diffuse the situation, as well as a negotiation team. Reports state that several hostages have been released by the self-defense force, but El Tequillero's mother remains in their custody. Authorities said that they understand the locals' frustration, but they are going about the situation the wrong way.
     
    "The truth is, they are not really community forces, nor are they police," Governor Hector Astudillo has said. "They are armed groups that unfortunately carry out acts... that generate more violence and confrontation, rather than help."
     
    However, the kidnapping of El Tequillero's mother seems to have had the desired effect, as Mexican news website Debate yesterday reported that the boss agreed to release engineer Isauro de la Paz Duque in exchange for his mother. The swap was overseen by the state Government negotiations team. For the time being, the military and police forces will remain in Totolapan to prevent any retaliations by the Tequilleros.
     
    Located at the foot of the mountains that produce much of Mexico's opium poppy crops, the are around Totolapan is notorious for drug trafficking, killings and extortion. The town itself is reportedly so dangerous that many of its outlying hamlets have been abandoned by their frightened residents.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    WATCH: Indian-Origin Elderly Woman Fights Off Robbers With Steel Chair In UK

    WATCH: Indian-Origin Elderly Woman Fights Off Robbers With Steel Chair In UK
      Hamalata Patel was confronted by two robbers with faces hidden behind balaclavas while working at her K and L Newsagent store in Winsford, Cheshire, last week.

    WATCH: Indian-Origin Elderly Woman Fights Off Robbers With Steel Chair In UK

    Obama Lights Diya In Oval Office, Celebrates Last Diwali As US President

    Obama Lights Diya In Oval Office, Celebrates Last Diwali As US President
    "This year, I was honoured to kindle the first-ever diya in the Oval Office -- a lamp that symbolizes how darkness will always be overcome by light," he said, according to a statement issued by the Embassy of US in India.

    Obama Lights Diya In Oval Office, Celebrates Last Diwali As US President

    Pizza, 'World's Saddest Polar Bear,' Lives Inside A Mall In China

    Pizza, 'World's Saddest Polar Bear,' Lives Inside A Mall In China
    The bear named Pizza is one of 500 species kept in a zoo inside the mall in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou and activists have been lobbying for the animals to be rehomed and the exhibition closed.

    Pizza, 'World's Saddest Polar Bear,' Lives Inside A Mall In China

    Watch: This Dancing Young Balloon-Seller In Delhi's Connaught Place Is A Star

    Watch: This Dancing Young Balloon-Seller In Delhi's Connaught Place Is A Star
    Someone Get Him A Proper Trainer Already!

    Watch: This Dancing Young Balloon-Seller In Delhi's Connaught Place Is A Star

    Winnipeg Daycare Home Closed After Toddler's Hands Injured; In Hospital 2 Weeks

    Winnipeg Daycare Home Closed After Toddler's Hands Injured; In Hospital 2 Weeks
    Chris and Julie Phippard brought their 13-month-old daughter to the unlicensed home daycare in St. Vital on Oct. 13.

    Winnipeg Daycare Home Closed After Toddler's Hands Injured; In Hospital 2 Weeks

    This Nepal Storyteller Uses Photos And Few Lines To Reveal Lives

    This Nepal Storyteller Uses Photos And Few Lines To Reveal Lives
    It started with a photograph of a smirking, young man wearing a heavy-metal band T-shirt and selling tea on the streets of Kathmandu. It has become a wildly popular blog chronicling street life in the Himalayan nation of Nepal.

    This Nepal Storyteller Uses Photos And Few Lines To Reveal Lives