Mexican mayoral candidate murdered after having request for security ignored

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Mexican mayoral candidate murdered after having request for security ignored
  • Gisela Gaytan, a Mexican mayoral candidate, was fatally shot on Monday during her campaign event.
  • Gaytan had requested security, but no response was received, prompting an inquiry into the lack of protection.
  • Data shows a 236 percent increase in political electoral violence in Mexico between 2018 and 2023.

A ruling party mayoral candidate was shot dead on Monday in central Mexico during an event on the first day of her campaign, despite having requested security protection from authorities and receiving no response.

A city council candidate was also initially reported as fatally shot in the incident, but the security ministry later said the person was missing.

On Monday evening, Gisela Gaytan had just presented her security strategy plan before a rally in Celaya, Guanajuato, when gunmen opened fire, killing her instantly.

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Guanajuato’s state prosecutor said it was investigating the killing. No arrests have been made.

Members of the National Guard and army soldiers arrive at the crime scene where Gisela Gaytan, candidate for mayor of Celaya for the National Regeneration Movement party, was fatally shot during a campaign rally on April 1, 2024, in Celaya, Mexico. (OSCAR ORTEGA/AFP via Getty Images)

The reasons why Gaytan was targeted were unclear but Guanajuato state has in recent years registered some of the highest numbers of homicides in Mexico and experienced turf wars between criminal groups.

Security analysts say most electoral violence tends to occur at municipal level, where gangs exert pressure to influence the outcome in the hope of securing more control over drug trafficking and other criminal rackets.

“It is increasingly clear who exercises real power in the territories where there is crime, it does not matter which party is in power,” said Vicente Sanchez, an expert in security and politics at the College of the Northern Border, a think tank. “It is still organized crime groups that decide who the candidates are.”

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Mexican elections have been marred by political violence for years, but figures suggest it is getting worse. Several dozen politicians and candidates were killed in the lead-up to the mid-term elections in 2021. According to Mexico City-based research organization Civic Data, there was a 236% increase in political electoral violence in the country between 2018 and 2023.

A report by political risk consultancy Integralia found 24 aspiring electoral candidates were killed between Sept. 1 and April 1, while the government on Tuesday said 14 people who had publicly stated they would run in elections had been assassinated since October 2023.

Gaytan, a 38-year-old former litigator, was the only female candidate in Celaya, one of the deadliest cities in the world and one of the most dangerous places to be a police officer in North America.

In a six-second video shared widely on social media, supporters at her rally are seen carrying party flags and shouting “Morena, Morena,” for President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador’s ruling National Regeneration Movement (MORENA) party. Seconds later, six gunshots sound and the crowd quickly disperses.

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Reuters could not determine the original source of the video.

Morena candidate for city council Adrian Guerrero was reported missing by the security ministry after the attack. Another two people were injured.

Earlier in the day, Gaytan told reporters that Morena had requested security from the state for her campaign. “We are looking at the issue to see how it can be resolved,” she said. “Let’s see if they have an answer for us today.”

Security Minister Rosa Icela Rodriguez promised justice at a press conference on Tuesday and said the investigation would include an inquiry into why Gaytan had not received protection from state or municipal authorities.

She acknowledged Morena had requested security measures for all its candidates in early March from the country’s National Electoral Institute, INE. Guanajuato’s state electoral body, she said, responded it had yet to start the process needed for the security protocols.

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