Christopher Woody Apr. 22, 2017
In March, Mexico had more than 2,000 homicide cases in a
month for the first time since summer 2011, when the country was
mired in the throes of a bloody cartel war.
The country also had more killings in the first quarter of 2017
than in the start of any year in at least two decades, according
to government data released Friday.
Unlike in 2011, when a bloody cartel fight in Ciudad Juarez
pushed the national body count to new heights, the current
violence has been spread over a number of states.
In January, 25 of the country's 32 states saw increases in homicides compared to the same
month in 2016.
Throughout Mexico, there were 2,020 homicide cases in March, up
roughly 11% from February. For January
through March, there were 5,775 killings around the country, up
29% from the same period in 2016.
March also reached a new high in terms of homicide victims. (A
single homicide case can contain multiple victims.) March's 2,256
homicide victims were the most so far this year and the highest
number reported since the Mexican government started releasing
those figures in 2014.
Every month in 2017 has exceeded 2,000 homicide victims, as did
each of the last six months of 2016. No month prior to that for
which there is data available surpassed that mark. Read More
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