Current:Home > NewsMexico’s National Guard kills 2 Colombians and wounds 4 on a migrant smuggling route near the US -FundWay
Mexico’s National Guard kills 2 Colombians and wounds 4 on a migrant smuggling route near the US
View
Date:2025-04-17 14:57:54
MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mexico’s National Guard fatally shot two Colombians and wounded four others in what the Defense Department claimed was a confrontation near the U.S. border.
Colombia’s foreign ministry said in a statement Sunday that all of the victims were migrants who had been “caught in the crossfire.” It identified the dead as a 20-year-old man and a 37-year-old woman, and gave the number of Colombians wounded as five, not four. There was no immediate explanation for the discrepancy.
Mexico’s Defense Department, which controls the National Guard, did not respond to requests for comment Monday on whether the victims were migrants, but it said one Colombian who was not injured in the shootings was turned over to immigration officials, suggesting they were.
If they were migrants, it would mark the second time in just over a month that military forces in Mexico have opened fire on and killed migrants.
On Oct. 1, the day President Claudia Sheinbaum took office, soldiers opened fire on a truck, killing six migrants in the southern state of Chiapas. An 11-year-old girl from Egypt, her 18-year-old sister and a 17-year-old boy from El Salvador died in that shooting, along with people from Peru and Honduras.
The most recent shootings happened Saturday on a dirt road near Tecate, east of Otay Mesa on the California border, that is frequently used by Mexican migrant smugglers, the department said in a statement late Sunday.
The Defense Department said a militarized National Guard patrol came under fire after spotting two trucks in the area, which is near an informal border crossing and wind power generation plant known as La Rumorosa.
One truck sped off and escaped. The National Guard opened fire on the other truck, killing two Colombians and wounding four others. There was no immediate information on their conditions, and there were no reported casualties among the guardsmen involved.
One Colombian and one Mexican man were found and detained unharmed at the scene, and the departments said officers found a pistol and several magazines commonly used for assault rifles at the scene.
Colombians have sometimes been recruited as gunmen for Mexican drug cartels, which are also heavily involved in migrant smuggling. But the fact the survivor was turned over to immigration officials and that the Foreign Relations Department contacted the Colombian consulate suggests they were migrants.
Cartel gunmen sometimes escort or kidnap migrants as they travel to the U.S. border. One possible scenario was that armed migrant smugglers may have been in one or both of the trucks, but that the migrants were basically unarmed bystanders.
The defense department said the three National Guard officers who opened fire have been taken off duty.
Former president Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who left office Sept. 30, gave the military an unprecedentedly wide role in public life and law enforcement; he created the militarized Guard and used the combined military forces as the country’s main law enforcement agencies, supplanting police. The Guard has since been placed under the control of the army.
But critics say the military is not trained to do civilian law enforcement work. Moreover, lopsided death tolls in such confrontations — in which all the deaths and injuries occur on one side — raise suspicions among activists whether there really was a confrontation.
For example, the soldiers who opened fire in Chiapas — who have been detained pending charges — claimed they heard “detonations” prior to opening fire. There was no indication any weapons were found at the scene.
____
Follow AP’s coverage of Latin America and the Caribbean at https://apnews.com/hub/latin-america
veryGood! (2)
Related
- Person accused of accosting Rep. Nancy Mace at Capitol pleads not guilty to assault charge
- Stolen bases, batting average are up in first postseason with MLB's new rules
- An Indianapolis police officer and a suspect shoot each other
- Amid massive search for mass killing suspect, Maine residents remain behind locked doors
- Small twin
- Vanessa Hudgens’ Dark Vixen Bachelorette Party Is the Start of Something New With Fiancé Cole Tucker
- A baseless claim about Putin’s health came from an unreliable Telegram account
- Working-age Americans are struggling to pay for health care, even those with insurance, report finds
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- AP Week in Pictures: Asia
Ranking
- SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
- George Santos faces arraignment on new fraud indictment in New York
- Gulf oil lease sale postponed by court amid litigation over endangered whale protections
- There is no clear path for women who want to be NFL coaches. Can new pipelines change that?
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- Hailey Bieber calls pregnancy rumors 'disheartening'
- The average long-term US mortgage rate rises for 7th straight week, 30-year loan reaches 7.79%
- US strikes back at Iranian-backed groups who attacked troops in Iraq, Syria: Pentagon
Recommendation
Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
What are Maine's gun laws?
Duran Duran reunites with Andy Taylor for best song in a decade on 'Danse Macabre' album
DC pandas will be returning to China in mid-November, weeks earlier than expected
Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
General Motors and Stellantis in talks with United Auto Workers to reach deals that mirror Ford’s
State Department struggles to explain why American citizens still can’t exit Gaza
Prominent British lawmaker Crispin Blunt reveals he was arrested in connection with rape allegation