Deploying over 10,000 security forces, President Sheinbaum’s ‘Michoacán Plan’ aims to reclaim the violence-plagued state from cartel control after the brazen killing of Uruapan’s mayor.
MEXICO CITY – The Mexican government unveiled a massive new security operation for the troubled state of Michoacán on Sunday, responding to national outrage over the public assassination of a mayor and relentless cartel violence that has plagued the region.
Dubbed the “Michoacán Plan for Peace and Justice,” the strategy will deploy more than 10,500 army, air force, and National Guard personnel to combat criminal groups, dismantle drug labs, and tackle rampant extortion networks. President Claudia Sheinbaum announced the plan represents a 57-billion-peso investment in the state’s security and future.
The offensive comes just weeks after the shocking murder of Uruapan Mayor Carlos Manzo, who was gunned down during Day of the Dead celebrations on November 1. Manzo had been a vocal critic of the federal government’s security strategy, and his brazen killing—which occurred as he held his young son—intensified pressure on Sheinbaum’s administration to act.
“The people of Michoacán deserve peace, and we are making a special effort to achieve it,” President Sheinbaum stated, committing to personally review the operation’s progress every 15 days.
The plan extends beyond pure militarization, integrating economic and social components. Senior cabinet members detailed initiatives to strengthen state police, bolster welfare programs, and support key sectors like agriculture and tourism, which have been crippled by cartel extortion and violence.
The region’s lucrative avocado and lime industries have been particularly hard-hit, with a prominent lime producer, Bernardo Bravo, murdered just weeks before Mayor Manzo. In a powerful symbol of defiance, Manzo’s wife, Grecia Quiroz, was sworn in to complete his term, vowing to continue his fight against the criminal groups that control much of daily life in Michoacán.







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