Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

After High-Profile Arrests, An Internal Sinaloa War Engulfs Mexico's Culiacán


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Over six days ending Monday, October 27, at least 41 people were killed in Sinaloa-most in and around Culiacán.

The surge followed a federal push that killed Luis Ezequiel“El Morral” Rubio, a field boss for the Los Chapitos faction, and re-detained several of his operators. October 22 was the worst single day, with a double-digit homicide toll and a string of gunfights, kidnappings, and raids.

Authorities also seized more than half a metric ton of methamphetamine, hundreds of thousands of suspected fentanyl pills and precursors, and 43 improvised explosive devices in rural zones near Mazatlán and Concordia.

The story behind the story is a civil war inside the Sinaloa cartel. On one side are Los Chapitos-the sons and loyalists of Joaquín“El Chapo” Guzmán. On the other are gunmen aligned with veteran capo Ismael“El Mayo” Zambada.

The split sharpened after a series of high-level hits to the Chapitos' security structure this year, notably the February extradition of José Ángel“El Güerito” Canobbio, linked to the armed wing known as Los Chimales.



Each time a commander is killed or captured, local cells scramble to fill the vacuum, and violence jumps across city neighborhoods and nearby towns such as Navolato and Eldorado.
Cartel Feuds Escalate Violence and Threaten Urban Safety
The human cost is not just the bodies found after shootouts. Disappearances have surged since the feud reignited last year, driven in part by forced recruitment and the concealment of victims.

Anger spilled into the open on October 25, when families marched along the Mazatlán malecón demanding answers. Outrage intensified after a 21-year-old cook vanished from a well-known seaside bar on October 5; the state economy secretary who owned the venue resigned on October 24.

Why this matters beyond Mexico: this is not a simple“cartel versus government” fight but a fluid, intra-cartel struggle that can erupt without warning in urban and tourist areas.

The state's recent arrests and seizures show capacity but also carry a risk of short, violent retaliation cycles. For residents, businesses, and visitors, the practical question is whether these operations can shrink the power of local enforcers-or merely reshuffle who controls the next street corner.

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The Rio Times

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