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 Mexico's Silent War: Why Cartels Are Killing Mayors-And What It Means For Everyone
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) On a festive November night in Uruapan, a city famous for its avocados, Mayor Carlos Manzo was shot dead in front of hundreds of families celebrating Day of the Dead.
The gunman fired seven times before being killed himself. Manzo, a bold critic of drug cartels, had warned for months that his life was in danger. His murder was not just another crime-it was a message: in Mexico, local leaders who defy the cartels don't last long.
Manzo is the tenth mayor assassinated in Mexico this year, part of a brutal pattern. Cartels, especially the powerful Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG), are hunting down mayors who refuse to cooperate.
They want control-over police, public funds, and entire towns. When a mayor resists, they eliminate them. The result? Fear replaces governance, and communities are left at the mercy of armed gangs.
Michoacán, where Uruapan sits, is the deadliest state for mayors. Seven have been killed there since 2021, with others attacked or disappeared.
But the problem spreads across the country, from Oaxaca to Guerrero, where cartels dictate who lives and who dies. The victims aren't just politicians; they're teachers, business owners, and ordinary citizens caught in the crossfire.
What's shocking is how little the federal government has done to stop it. Despite promises of security, many mayors get no protection. Some, like Manzo, beg for help-only to be ignored.
The cartels, meanwhile, grow richer and bolder, extorting farmers, hijacking local economies, and turning towns into their personal fiefdoms.
Mexico's cartel violence threatens citizens and global markets
This isn't just Mexico 's problem. The avocados from Uruapan end up in U.S. and European supermarkets. The drugs fueling the violence flood global markets. And the instability pushes migrants north, straining borders and cities far beyond Mexico.
When cartels control a town, they don't just kill mayors-they destroy trust in government, scare away investment, and make life unbearable for families who just want safety.
After Manzo's death, thousands took to the streets, demanding action. But change won't come easy. The cartels are entrenched, and the government's response has been slow and inconsistent. Until that changes, the killings will continue, and the cartels will keep winning.
For expats and foreigners, this is a story about more than crime. It's about what happens when a country's institutions weaken, when leaders fail to act, and when ordinary people pay the price.
Mexico's fight is a warning: when cartels grow stronger than the state, no one is safe-not mayors, not farmers, not visitors. The question is whether Mexico's leaders will finally stand up to them-or if the rest of the world will have to live with the consequences.
 The gunman fired seven times before being killed himself. Manzo, a bold critic of drug cartels, had warned for months that his life was in danger. His murder was not just another crime-it was a message: in Mexico, local leaders who defy the cartels don't last long.
Manzo is the tenth mayor assassinated in Mexico this year, part of a brutal pattern. Cartels, especially the powerful Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG), are hunting down mayors who refuse to cooperate.
They want control-over police, public funds, and entire towns. When a mayor resists, they eliminate them. The result? Fear replaces governance, and communities are left at the mercy of armed gangs.
Michoacán, where Uruapan sits, is the deadliest state for mayors. Seven have been killed there since 2021, with others attacked or disappeared.
But the problem spreads across the country, from Oaxaca to Guerrero, where cartels dictate who lives and who dies. The victims aren't just politicians; they're teachers, business owners, and ordinary citizens caught in the crossfire.
What's shocking is how little the federal government has done to stop it. Despite promises of security, many mayors get no protection. Some, like Manzo, beg for help-only to be ignored.
The cartels, meanwhile, grow richer and bolder, extorting farmers, hijacking local economies, and turning towns into their personal fiefdoms.
Mexico's cartel violence threatens citizens and global markets
This isn't just Mexico 's problem. The avocados from Uruapan end up in U.S. and European supermarkets. The drugs fueling the violence flood global markets. And the instability pushes migrants north, straining borders and cities far beyond Mexico.
When cartels control a town, they don't just kill mayors-they destroy trust in government, scare away investment, and make life unbearable for families who just want safety.
After Manzo's death, thousands took to the streets, demanding action. But change won't come easy. The cartels are entrenched, and the government's response has been slow and inconsistent. Until that changes, the killings will continue, and the cartels will keep winning.
For expats and foreigners, this is a story about more than crime. It's about what happens when a country's institutions weaken, when leaders fail to act, and when ordinary people pay the price.
Mexico's fight is a warning: when cartels grow stronger than the state, no one is safe-not mayors, not farmers, not visitors. The question is whether Mexico's leaders will finally stand up to them-or if the rest of the world will have to live with the consequences.
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