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The funeral of Petatlan mayor Arturo Gomez in Guerrero State, Mexico on Dec. 29, 2017. 
Francisco Robles—AFP/Getty Images | 
Mexico has recorded its highest homicide rate in years, with the government’s interior ministry reporting there were 29,168 murders in 2017, more than in 2011 at the peak of Mexico’s drug cartel-stoked violence.
The death toll is Mexico’s highest since the government began keeping records
 in 1997, and shot past 2011’s tally of 27,213 homicides, the Associated
 Press reports. According to the Interior Department, Mexico’s homicide 
rate this past year equated with 20.5 murders per 100,000 residents; in 
2011, that figure was 19.4.
The homicide rate is still significantly below those of Brazil and Colombia
 (both 27), Venezuela (57), or El Salvador (60.8), AP reports. However, 
the per-100,000 figure is based on the number of police investigations, 
rather than individual deaths, Mexico security analyst Alejandro Hope 
said, meaning the total real rate is likely far higher.
“The violence in Mexico has many causes. Drug 
trafficking is one of them, of course, but it is not the only one,” Hope
 told AP, while suggesting that the increasing toll is a “regression to 
the mean” over the lower murder rates Mexico enjoyed between 1997 and 
2007.
Mexico President Enrique Pena Nieto had campaigned pledging to end 
the epidemic of drug cartel violence that plagued the country between 
2006 and 2012, but his administration saw only a temporary dip in 
homicides between 2012 and 2014.
Mexico is preparing for another election in July,
 with left-wing provocateur and former Mexico City mayor Andres Manuel 
Lopez Obrador the early frontrunner, and gang violence may again prove a
 key polling issue. In the beginning of January, nine people were brutally killed in the Gulf coast state of Veracruz in a suspected conflict between rival gang factions. 
 
 
 Hello, my name is Jack Sparrow. I'm a 50 year old self-employed Pirate from the Caribbean.
Hello, my name is Jack Sparrow. I'm a 50 year old self-employed Pirate from the Caribbean. 
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