Two police, family of six killed in latest Mexico violence

Mexican army and federal police forces patrol a neighborhood in Navolato, Sinaloa state, following a shooting in February. Sinaloa, home to Mexico's top narco-trafficers, has seen a spike in violent crime following a period of relative calm

Two federal police officers were mowed down Saturday in Mexico's Veracruz state, where gunman also killed a family of six, in the latest spasm of violence linked to criminal gangs. "Organized crime has sparked a serious problem of violence in Veracruz," said the state's governor Miguel Angel Yunes in a statement, calling the latest violence "an act of terrible barbarism." Among Saturday's victims were two federal police commanders, who were ambushed by gunmen in the city of Cardel. Another agent was wounded. Initially Yunes said three police had been killed, but he later said the third officer had survived and was recovering. In the nearby city of Coatzacoalcos, the dead included two adults and four children who died in a hail of bullets as they ate dinner at an outdoor restaurant. Authorities added that two women were fatally shot in the town of Orizaba, also in Veracruz, one of Mexico's most violent states. Much of the violence is the result of turf battles between two rival drug trafficking gangs, the Zetas and Jalisco New Generation.