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Mexican gunmen stop ambulance, kill patient inside
(Agencies)
Updated: 2009-06-20 10:43

MORELIA, Mexico: Gunmen tossed a grenade at an ambulance and then opened its doors to kill a patient inside who had narrowly survived an earlier shooting in a drug cartel-plagued Mexican state Friday. Paramedics ran for their lives during the attack.

Mexican gunmen stop ambulance, kill patient inside
Policemen carry the coffin with the remains of Tijuana police officer Sergio Antonio Barajas during his funeral service in Tijuana, Mexico, Friday, June 19, 2009. [Agencies]

Vehicles carrying four masked gunmen cut off the ambulance around 2 a.m. as it carried the 23-year-old man to a hospital in Morelia, the capital on Michoacan state, according to a report from the state prosecutor's office.

Assailants tossed a fragmentation grenade at the ambulance, setting it on fire, and the two paramedics ran away, according to the police report. The gunmen then opened the back doors and fired at the patient and his wife, who was accompanying him.

The man died and the 20-year-old woman was listed in serious condition. No arrests have been made.

The state prosecutor's office said the victim had been taken to a local hospital by his family Sunday night after being wounded in a shootout between rival gangs in Uruapan, a center of Mexico's avocado industry. He was being transferred early Friday to a better-equipped hospital in the state capital.

Another man wounded in the attack remains hospitalized and is being guarded by city police, officials said.

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Uruapan, a city of some 240,000 people, has been hard hit by drug violence that has killed more than 10,800 people nationwide since 2006. Assailants in 2006 entered an Uruapan bar and dumped five human heads on a dance floor.

The city mayor is among seven detained mayors charged Thursday with protecting members of La Familia drug cartel.

President Felipe Calderon has sent thousands of soldiers to Michoacan since taking office in 2006. Since then, gangs under pressure have unleashed unprecedented killings, attacking police, soldiers and rival smugglers.

Also Friday, authorities in the border city of Ciudad Juarez said they would step up patrols after killings there rebounded to levels near those that led the government to send in 5,000 army troops in March.

The killings in Ciudad Juarez -- most of which are believed to be drug-related -- had declined to about one per day after the army sent troops there in March to patrol the streets.

But the state Attorney General's office said killings have risen again to an average of between eight and nine per day. Through mid-June, there have been 800 killings in the border city across from El Paso, Texas, a level similar to the approximately 1,600 deaths in 2008.

Late Wednesday, four teenagers were shot to death on a Ciudad Juarez street by gunmen wielding assault rifles. The four were between the ages of 16 and 18.

Chihuahua state Public Safety Secretary Victor Valencia said that local, state and federal forces had decided to step up patrols in the most dangerous parts of the city, and increase checks of suspicious vehicles.

Local police have been working alongside the army troops, who are scheduled to begin withdrawing later this year.