Gunfights have broken out in the capital of Mexico’s Sinaloa state after security forces captured one of Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman’s sons, who is wanted by the US on drug trafficking charges.

Defence secretary Luis Cresencio Sandoval said Army and National Guard personnel captured 32-year-old Ovidio Guzman in a pre-dawn operation in Culiacan.

Three years ago an attempt to arrest Ovidio ended in humiliation for the government when President Andrew Manuel Lopez Obrador ordered the military to let him go after gunmen shot up the city with high-powered weapons.

Image:
Ovidio Guzman pictured during his failed arrest in 2019. Pic: AP

This time local and state officials in Sinaloa warned residents to stay inside, suspended local government activities and closed schools, while the Mexican military closed Culiacan’s airport amid gunfire.

Mexican airline Aeromexico said one of its planes had been hit by gunfire ahead of a scheduled flight to Mexico City, though no one was hurt.

Videos on social media appeared to show heavy fighting across the city as the sky was lit up by helicopter gunfire.

Ovidio’s capture comes ahead of Mr Lopez Obrador hosting a North American leaders’ summit in Mexico City next week, in which US President Joe Biden is expected to want to discuss drug trafficking.

“This is a significant blow to the Sinaloa cartel and major victory for the rule of law,” said Mike Vigil, the DEA’s former chief of international operations.

“It will not, however, impede the flow of drugs into the US. Hopefully, Mexico will extradite him to the US.”

Six months of surveillance in cartel territory

Ovidio’s capture was the result of six months of reconnaissance and surveillance in cartel territory, Mr Sandoval said.

National Guard troops spotted SUVs, some with homemade armour, and immediately coordinated with the army as they established a perimeter around the suspicious vehicles and forced the occupants out in order to search them.

The security forces then came under fire but were able to gain control of the situation and identify Ovidio among those present and in possession of firearms, Mr Sandoval said.

Cartel members set up 19 roadblocks covering all point of access to the city of Culiacan, including Culiacan’s airport and outside the local army base.

Vehicles and buses were set on fire by members of a drug gang
Image:
Vehicles and buses were set on fire by members of a drugs gang

A leader of ‘the juniors’ faction

Mr Sandoval said Ovidio was a leader of a Sinaloa faction he called “los menores” or “the juniors”, who are also known as “los Chapitos” or “the little Chapos”.

The other “little Chapos” are two of his brothers, Ivan Archivaldo Guzman and Jesus Alfredo Guzman, who are believed to have been running cartel operations with Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada.

Mr Vigil said the Chapitos have been taking greater control of the cartel because Zambada was in poor health and isolated in the mountains.

“The Chapitos know that if El Mayo dies, (the cartel) is going to break apart if they don’t have control,” he said.

“It’s going to be very important that the US requests Ovidio’s extradition quickly and that Mexico does it.”

A soldier keeps watch near the wreckage of a burnt vehicle set on fire by members of a drug gang as a barricade
Image:
A soldier keeps watch near the wreckage of a burnt vehicle set on fire by members of a drugs gang as a barricade

US offered $5m reward

A 2018 federal indictment in Washington, DC, accused Ovidio of conspiring to distribute cocaine, methamphetamine and cannabis in the US.

The US has offered a $5m (£4m) reward for information leading to the arrest or conviction of Ovidio, who has become a key figure in the cartel since his father’s arrest.

It is unclear whether Ovidio will be extradited to the US like his father, who is serving a life sentence at Colorado’s Supermax prison.

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