MEXICO CITY — Schools and businesses in Culiacan, the state capital of Sinaloa remained closed and festivities around Mexican Independence were canceled Thursday as fears over clashes between factions of the Sinaloa cartel disrupt life in the northern city of 1 million.
Sinaloa Gov. Rubén Rocha and outgoing President Andrés Manuel López Obrador – both of the ruling Morena party – have downplayed the tensions, which started Monday, and said that local, state and federal forces are ensuring safety in the area.
But despite the recent deployment of special forces soldiers, planes and heavily armed helicopters, the fear continues. Even Rocha recognized that the clashes, which have followed the arrest in the U.S. of two cartel leaders in late July, could continue.
Security forces are ''dissuading some violent acts but above all reducing the risks to the population to a minimum,'' Rocha said in a video posted to social media Thursday.
Still, for safety reasons, he said ''there will not be any celebration'' for the Sept. 15-16 holiday, adding that school will be suspended Thursday and Friday because so few students showed up.
In 2008, a grenade attack in the city of Morelia, west of Mexico City, during the independence celebrations killed eight and wounded dozens, in what was an unusual cartel mass attack on civilians.
The Sinaloa governor maintained the state has sufficient security presence to protect people, but around Culiacan people appear to have a very different view.
''The government doesn't control anything, absolutely nothing,'' said Ismael Bojórquez, director of the weekly newspaper Riodoce in Culiacan, which specializes in coverage of organized crime. ''There is a lot of fear. The people are defenseless.''