'Fear is everywhere': BBC reports from Mexican city turned into war zone by drug cartel feud
'Fear is everywhere': BBC reports from Mexican city turned into war zone by drug cartel feud 13 hours ago Quentin SommervilleInternational correspondent, in Culiacán, Mexico Mexico's president has praised the special forces for "bringing down" the country's most wanted man, drug lord Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes.
Warning: This article contains graphic accounts of cartel violence which readers may find upsetting.
We had just come from the scene of a shooting inside a garage in the city centre.
The owner was lying dead in his office, blood spreading across the white tiled floor.
She was the man's wife, but there was nothing to be done.
Héctor checked for vitals and then placed a paper blanket over the corpse.
Héctor said the violence in Culiacán had never been so bad or gone on for so long.
Last year, their number of call outs increased by over 70%.
"Sinaloa cartel was like a family.
Everyone was united in a single cartel.
They were friends, they ate at the same table," Héctor explained.
"They were like brothers –parents, uncles, sisters - and suddenly they were fighting… and locked in a deadly feud," he said.
Both Héctor and Julio were wearing body armour, 14kg of Kevlar and armour plate.
So we run the risk of being caught in the crossfire of an attack and getting injured. "
The heavily armed soldiers and marines were checking cars for any sign of them.
Kidnapping in Culiacán can be a fate worse than death.
From the state of the victim's corpse, it was clear he'd been tortured.
His body was intact, but the skull had been flayed and the eyes removed.
A sign was left with the corpse, in large lettering, a message from one cartel faction to another.
Culiacán is a prosperous city, full of shopping malls, neat parks and fancy car dealerships.
He'd been killed at close range by a handgun.
And the same trend continues. "
So what might end the violence?
I met one of the Sinaloa factions to ask that question.
Before the meeting, I was told not to bring my phone, nor any tracking devices.
There's a lot of death of innocent people. "
Nothing will calm down until there's only one faction left. "
Reynalda Pulido's son, Javier Ernesto, disappeared in December 2020.
She's still searching for him, and for others too - and leads the group Mothers Fighting Back.
They were looking for disturbed soil, indentations in the ground, any sign of a makeshift grave.
As they probed the earth, they smelt the dirt, looking for the distinctive odour of human remains.
"What gives me strength is realizing that no one else is going to look for them.
I realize it because no one is moving to search for the disappeared in Sinaloa.
I asked Reynalda gently if she thought she would ever find her son.
"It's something I ask myself very often," she said, wiping tears from her eyes.
And the children of all the families who come to ask me for help become my children.
My son is there, in each and every one of them.
All of them carry a little piece of my son. "
The root cause of Culiacán's misery is the fentanyl trade.
In a cartel-owned basement, "Román" (not his real name), who produces the drug, tells me to follow him.
He wore a face mask and gloves while handling the deadly bundles.
When he opened one package, it was pressed solid, the number 300 indented in the surface.
Each package weighs a kilo and is worth $20,000 (£14,800).
But Román explained that depending on the city it is sent to, it can fetch more.
"If we take it to New York, it can go as high as $28,000 or $29,000.
The further up it goes, the higher the price, and the greater our profit. "
"But when it comes to production, we've never stopped.
Sometimes we do scale back because things get hot, the government gets too close.
The US has labelled you terrorists, we tell him.
As long as people want to consume it, they are free to do so.
No one forced them to start this vice, to start using this stuff. "
The Mexican government has said it is making progress in its fight against drug trafficking.
It says it has cut the fentanyl supply to the US by 50%.
From Culiacán I travelled to Mexico City.
He was still breathing and screaming for help.
Both victims were patched up and rushed to a nearby hospital.
They were bystanders, it turned out, caught in crossfire.
But, still the military placed an armed cordon around the hospital in case of attack.
We would later learn that the men survived.
"These are the first victims we've found alive since November," Héctor said
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