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Texas National Guardsman shot dead in Mexico

October 21, 2010
MSNBC
10/21/2010
Source …..

NUEVO LAREDO, Mexico — A Texas National Guardsman and another man were shot dead in the Mexican border city of Ciudad Juarez, according to local officials and reports.

The body of Jose Gil Hernandez Ramirez, 21, of El Paso, was identified by members of his family, Arturo Sandoval, a spokesman for the Chihuahua state attorney general’s office, said.

A spokesman for the Texas National Guard said they were not yet ready to confirm the man’s identity, but said they would do what they could to help his family and a full military funeral would be provided if they wished.

Their deaths came as drug cartels fought gunbattles with the Mexican army in several parts of the northern border region, including residential areas, on Wednesday.

Parents rushed to take their children out of school to safety while factories forced some workers to stay inside for their own safety and told others not to come to work.

Chihuahua state officials told the El Paso Times newspaper that Ciudad Juarez residents found Ramirez and another man, named as Rafael Ramirez Reza, 42, dead on the street with multiple gunshot wounds.

A third man was also reportedly shot and was taken to a hospital for treatment.

Col. Bill Meehan, a spokesman for the Texas National Guard, said he could not confirm the identity of the dead man in line with military custom to allow next of kin to “take care of the important things” they needed to do.

He said a statement was likely to be issued later Thursday.

“It’s really going to be a law enforcement investigation. It’s really not something that we are discussing at this time,” he told msnbc.com.

‘Extreme caution’ advised

Meehan said there was a prohibition against National Guardsmen going to Mexico, but this only applied to full-time staff and those on duty.

“But we certainly have advised all our soldiers and airmen to use extreme caution when going into Mexico,” Meehan told msnbc.com.

He said they would do what they could to help the family of the dead man.

“We have been at war here since 2003 and unfortunately we are familiar with the concept of death,” Meehan said. “This person is a soldier, so we will do a full military funeral if that’s the family’s wishes. And then we will learn from this.”

Special Agent Michael Martinez, a spokesman for the FBI, told the the El Paso Times that the FBI was investigating.

In Ciudad Juarez and Nuevo Laredo, Mexican troops and drug gang members engaged in shootouts, while in Matamoros, across the border from Brownsville, assailants threw a grenade at an army barracks.

Witnesses in Nuevo Laredo said gunmen forced people from their cars to use the vehicles in the blockades.

At least four shootouts too place in the city, including one behind a Walmart store near a residential area, according to witnesses and reporters at the scene.

Bullet casings from assault rifles littered the area, and at least one house and two cars had bullet holes.

Apolinar Rodriguez, a resident of the neighborhood, said he thought he heard grenade blasts.

“They are fighting with everything they have,” he said.

Parents rushed to schools to pick up their children and factory managers at one industrial park closed their gates, ordering their workers not to leave and canceling night shifts.

“We were not allowed to leave for two-and-a-half hours,” said Eva Lara, a worker at one factory.

The local governments of Nuevo Laredo and Reynosa warned residents to stay inside through a series of Twitter and Facebook messages, and the U.S. Consulate officials said American citizens should do likewise.

Shootouts also erupted in Reynosa, across from McAllen, causing a huge traffic jam in the highway connecting the city with Monterrey and Matamoros.

By the evening, the Nuevo Laredo government said in a Twitter message that the “situation of risk” had ended, and most of the vehicles blocking the roads had been removed.

Violence has soared this year in northeastern Mexico amid a split between the Gulf and Zetas drug gangs.

Cartel gunmen frequently use stolen cars and buses to form roadblocks during battles with soldiers.

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