Pubdate: Sat, 25 Sep 2010 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Copyright: 2010 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.wsj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487 Author: Nicholas Casey FOURTH MAYOR IN MEXICO IS KILLED MEXICO CITY-A Mexican mayor was killed in the fourth such fatal attack since August, and another one was shot hours later, in a pair of attacks underlining escalating violence against the country's politicians. Prisciliano Rodriguez, mayor of the town of Doctor Gonzalez, was ambushed by gunmen and killed as he was arriving at his ranch late Thursday in his SUV, the attorney general's office in Nuevo Leon state said. Hours later Ricardo Solis, the mayor-elect of the town of Gran Morelos in nearby Chihuahua state, was shot as well, according to a government spokesman. Mr. Solis was in critical condition in a hospital Friday evening. There were no details on why he was attacked, though the two shootings appear unrelated. The attacks marked the latest in a string of violence targeting local mayors in Mexico, highlighting the government's inability to protect its own political establishment. There was some disagreement on the motive of Mr. Rodriguez's killing. Early Friday, President Felipe Calderon said his government would make no truce with criminals"and offered condolences to the mayor's family. But a top official in the state government said early investigations had determined the crime wasn't linked to organized crime. The killing had to do with a conflict over land, the official said. Last month, the body of Edelmiro Cavazos, mayor of the nearby tourist town of Santiago, was found dumped beside a highway with signs of torture. A group of police officers was later arrested for allegedly helping to assassinate Mr. Cavazos. On Aug. 29, gunmen attacked Mayor Marco Antonio Leal Garcia in the town of Hidalgo in northern Tamaulipas. The killing was followed on Sept. 8 by the assassination of Alexander Lopez Garcia, mayor of a town in the central state of San Luis Potosi. Thursday's violence highlights the perilous situation in Monterrey in particular. The city, once known as "The Sultan of the North" for its immense industrial wealth, is now the site of rising kidnappings and extortions. A shootout near an elite school in the city recently killed two bodyguards. Many longtime business executives have fled to the U.S. or Mexico City. Late last month, the U.S. State Department ordered the children of diplomatic personnel out of the Monterrey consulate, a policy typically reserved for postings like Sudan and Yemen. Violence flared elsewhere in Mexico. Authorities said a shootout between suspected gunmen from rival gangs Thursday left seven dead in Acapulco, the resort city that has been increasingly marred by clashes between drug gangs. Five local police officers were arrested in connection to the shooting. The decapitated bodies of two men were found nearby the previous day. Since Mr. Calderon escalated fighting against the country's crime groups in 2006, more than 28,000 people have been killed in drug-related violence. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D