TANGAMANDAPIO, Mexico — Mexico's traditional and Indigenous community police forces are coming under increasingly deadly fire from drug cartels, authorities said Monday.
Adrián López, the chief prosecutor in the western state of Michoacan, confirmed that gunmen linked to drug cartels shot to death seven members of the community police force in the town of Coahuayana over the weekend.
The community guards were killed just days after seven members of an Indigenous community police force were kidnapped, apparently by cartel gunmen, and put through ''hell'' in another Michoacan town before they were freed Friday.
In the face of cartel turf wars that have emptied towns in the Mexican countryside, many places have turned to ''community police,'' who are relatively untrained members of the town who volunteer or are paid a small stipend to protect residents.
More common in Indigenous towns — which have centuries of experience in organizing and defending themselves — the community police are a more established and trusted force than the ephemeral ''self defense'' squads that flourished in Michoacan between 2013 and 2014 to fight the cartels but were quickly corrupted.
But while they enjoy the trust of their fellow townspeople, the community guards can't match the firepower of the cartels that want their land.
López, the state prosecutor, said the attack in Coahuayana Saturday was related to battles by drug cartels to control the coastal area, a main route for landing seaborne shipments of cocaine.
''This all involves the decision of the members of criminal groups to gain territory and carry out illegal activities, mainly drug smuggling,'' he said.