Current:Home > Stocks2 workers conducting polls for Mexico’s ruling party killed, 1 kidnapped in southern Mexico -ProsperityStream Academy
2 workers conducting polls for Mexico’s ruling party killed, 1 kidnapped in southern Mexico
View
Date:2025-04-17 19:17:44
MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mexico’s president said Tuesday that assailants have killed two workers who were conducting internal polling for his Morena party in southern Mexico.
President Andrés Manuel López Obrador said a third worker was kidnapped and remains missing. The three were part of a group of five employees who were conducting polls in the southern state of Chiapas, near the border with Guatemala. He said the other two pollsters were safe.
It was the latest in a series of violent incidents that illustrate how lawless many parts of rural Mexico have become; even the ruling party — and the national statistics agency — have not been spared.
The president’s Morena party frequently uses polls to decide who to run as a candidate, and Chiapas will hold elections for governor in June.
Rosa Icela Rodríguez, the country’s public safety secretary, said three people have been arrested in connection with the killings and abduction, which occurred Saturday in the town of Juárez, Chiapas.
She said the suspects were found with the victims’ possessions, but did not say whether robbery was a motive.
Local media reported the two murdered pollsters were found with a handwritten sign threatening the government and signed by the Jalisco drug cartel; however, neither the president nor Rodríguez confirmed that. The Jalisco gang is fighting a bloody turf battle with the Sinaloa cartel in Chiapas.
The leader of the Morena party, Mario Delgado, wrote in his social media accounts that “with great pain, indignation and sadness, we energetically condemn and lament the killing of our colleagues,” adding “we demand that the authorities carry out a full investigation.”
Rural Mexico has long been a notoriously dangerous place to do political polling or marketing surveys.
In July, Mexico’s government statistics agency acknowledged it had to pay gangs to enter some towns to do census work last year.
National Statistics Institute Assistant Director Susana Pérez Cadena told a congressional committee at the time that workers also were forced to hire criminals in order to carry out some census interviews.
One census taker was kidnapped while trying to do that work, Pérez Cadena said. She said the problem was worse in rural Mexico, and that the institute had to employ various methods to be able to operate in those regions.
In 2016, three employees of a polling company were rescued after a mob beat them bloody after apparently mistaking them for thieves.
Inhabitants of the town of Centla, in the Gulf coast state of Tabasco, attacked five employees of the SIMO Consulting firm, including two women and three men. Three of the poll workers, including one woman, were held for hours and beaten, while two others were protected by a local official.
The mob apparently mistook them for thieves. The company denied they were involved in any illegal acts.
In 2015, a mob killed and burned the bodies of two pollsters conducting a survey about tortilla consumption in a small town southeast of Mexico City. The mob had accused the men of molesting a local girl, but the girl later said she had never even seen the two before.
veryGood! (9)
Related
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Harris’ pick of Walz amps up excitement in Midwestern states where Democrats look to heal divisions
- 'The Final Level': Popular GameStop magazine Game Informer ends, abruptly lays off staff
- Indiana’s completion of a 16-year highway extension project is a ‘historic milestone,’ governor says
- Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
- Marathon swimmer who crossed Lake Michigan in 1998 is trying it again
- US ambassador to Japan to skip A-bomb memorial service in Nagasaki because Israel was not invited
- Why AP called Missouri’s 1st District primary for Wesley Bell over Rep. Cori Bush
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- It Ends With Us Actress Isabela Ferrer Shares Sweet Way Blake Lively Helped With Her Red Carpet Look
Ranking
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- People with sensitive stomachs avoid eating cherries. Here's why.
- Jury orders city of Naperville to pay $22.5M in damages connected to wrongful conviction
- As stock markets plummet, ask yourself: Do you really want Harris running the economy?
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- Ancient 'hobbits' were even smaller than previously thought, scientists say
- The Imane Khelif controversy lays bare an outrage machine fueled by lies
- Tropical Storm Debby swirls over Atlantic, expected to again douse the Carolinas before moving north
Recommendation
A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
Climate Advocates Rally Behind Walz as Harris’ VP Pick
What Lauren Lolo Wood Learned from Chanel West Coast About Cohosting Ridiculousness
Wall Street hammered amid plunging global markets | The Excerpt
Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
It Ends With Us Actress Isabela Ferrer Shares Sweet Way Blake Lively Helped With Her Red Carpet Look
Pitbull Stadium: 'Mr. Worldwide' buys naming rights for FIU football stadium
USWNT's win vs. Germany at Olympics shows 'heart and head' turnaround over the last year