Juan Diego Quesada
México
Gabriel Gómez Michel,
a lawmaker from the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), was found
dead on Tuesday. He and one of his assistants were driving in a car when
men approached them on the highway. They were both kidnapped and, hours
later, the police found their charred bodies in a van.
The congressman and his assistant were kidnapped around 6pm
on Monday in the city of Tlaquepaque in Jalisco (western Mexico).
Images released show a group of men getting out of a white vehicle at an
intersection and pointing guns at the van in which the victims were
traveling, en route to the airport. They were not heard from again. Four
hours after the kidnapping, Gómez Michel’s relatives reported his disappearance.
The state attorney in Jalisco said the kidnappers did not
ask for a ransom and investigators have no solid leads on the case.
Those who knew Gómez Michel
say he had not received any kind of threat and that he had no obvious
enemies who might want to see him dead. After hearing about the case,
PRI congressional coordinator Manlio Fabio Beltrones said: “This should
not go unpunished. We felt enormous indignation when we found out about
this sad and criminal incident. The murder of a federal deputy cannot go
unnoticed.” By the afternoon, President Enrique Peña Nieto still had
not spoken regarding the death of his fellow party member. But other PRI
colleagues have asked for Mexico’s General Prosecutor to take over the
case from state authorities.
The deceased lawmaker was a pediatrician and two-time mayor
of El Grullo, an agricultural mountain town of 200,000 residents where
the main crop is sugarcane. He became a federal deputy in 2012 on the
Green Party ticket. The Green Party is a PRI-affiliated
pseudo-environmental group. During his first session, Gómez Michel
switched sides and joined the PRI. He proposed five bills but none of
them were passed.
In his biographical entry on social media, the late
congressman described himself as a Catholic and a moderate man. He was a
member of four congressional committees: human rights, environment,
navy and livestock farming.
Months after President Peña Nieto took office, Mexico’s
intelligence service, Cisen, thwarted an assassination plot against
Movimiento Ciudadano deputy Ricardo Monreal. Monreal was the
presidential campaign coordinator for the leftist leader Andrés Manuel
López Obrador in 2012.
The hitmen were arrested while staying in a hotel in downtown Mexico City, waiting for the right moment to strike.
Earlier this month, the brother of deputy Joel Miranda Salgado was
decapitated. The investigation of that case has not made any progress so
far.
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