The Headless Bodies of the Victims

"Landep News"
Five Severed Human Heads Found In The Streets of Acapulco
The Headless Bodies of the Victims
Famous resort of Acapulco became a place of horror as Mexican police found five severed heads in a sack outside a primary school soon after the drugs gangs threatened to kill elementary school teachers unless they paid half their salaries to the cartels. This demand forced 130 schools in the city to close earlier in September as administrators and parents decided they should not start classes.
The five heads were found on Tuesday in a sack placed inside a wooden crate, and by the sack they found a handwritten message in which three drugs traffickers and the Guerrero state governor were threatened.
The governor was threatened because of the measures against drugs cartels he announced. The message was advising the people in the region to thank the governor for continuing the war.
It appears that the five heads belonged to men, though some of the headless bodies found in other parts of the city were too immolated to determine gender.
At the beginning of the school year, many teachers announced that they refused to go to classes because they had been threatened with death unless they paid. In stead, they went on strike, which led to the closure of more than 100 schools.
Governor Angel Aguirre promised measures, including increase of police patrols and the installation of surveillance cameras and panic buttons in schools. Even so, the teachers said they feared for their safety and the safety of their students.
This gruesome discovery comes a few days after the police discovered the beheaded body of a journalist woman who was decapitated in retaliation for her comments on a social networking site.
The woman was said to be the third victim to be killed this way this month in the Tamaulipas state, and was identified as Marisol Macias Castaneda, a manager of the newspaper Primera Hora. The woman wrote on a website about drug gang lookouts, and drug sales points, which is said to have angered the cartels.
In the message found near Castaneda’s headless body she was called La Nena de Laredo, that is “The Girl from Lareda.” The message was making a mockery of the army and the police, saying that what happened to the woman was a result of her trusting these enforcement agencies. It was signed with a triple Z, alluding to the super-violent Zetas cartel.
According to Mexican Human Rights Commission, eight journalists were killed in Mexico this year, and 74 since 2000.
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