President Andrs Manuel Lopez Obrador said Sunday that a monument will be put up to memorialise nine US-Mexican dual citizens ambushed and slain last year by suspected drug gang assassins along a remote road in the northern border region near New Mexico.
In remarks to members of the small town of La Mora, which was shattered by the November 4 killings of three women and six children from the extended Langford, LeBaron and Miller families, Lopez Obrador said the first goal is to bring those responsible to justice.
Speaking after meeting with victims' relatives, the president said an agreement had been reached with municipal and Sonora state officials to establish a monument of some sort "here where these lamentable and painful events took place", and also for special recognition of those who risked their lives to rush to the aid of victims and survivors.
"So that we exalt this, the true solidarity: He who is willing to give his life for another," Lopez Obrador said.
He promised to meet with family members in two months to give them another in-person update on the investigation and to return in four to six months to present a plan on regional development including road improvements.
The mostly bilingual American-Mexicans have lived in northern Mexico for decades and consider themselves Mormons, though they are not affiliated with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
The community's origins in Mexico date to the official end of polygamy over a century ago by the LDS church, which prompted many families that continued the practice to establish colonies elsewhere. Many of those in northern Mexico have by now, over the generations, abandoned polygamy as well.
La Mora is a hamlet of about 300 people in Sonora state while Colonia LeBaron is a larger town of over 2,000 on the other side of the mountains in Chihuahua; the two are linked by a bone-jarring and treacherous dirt road where the attack occurred as the women and children were traveling to visit relatives.
The areas lie in the territory of rival drug gangs with the Sinaloa cartel of convicted kingpin Joaqun "El Chapo" Guzman holding sway in Sonora and the Juarez cartel dominant in Chihuahua.
The killings sowed grief and fear in the tightly knit communities, and dozens fled La Mora for the United States in the subsequent days out of concerns for their safety.
What was once a tranquil and even idyllic life in a fertile river valley surrounded by mountains and desert scrub had grown increasingly tenuous as criminal gangs exerted their influence and fought each other, some said.
"Broken hearts, defeated, and through the fault of crime. I personally do not understand how so many people continue to die in such a beautiful country, such good people and with such richness," community member Margaret Langford said at Sunday's ceremony.
"I was born in Chihuahua but I have been living for 20 years here in La Mora, a place that was so tranquil and neighbours we treasure so much." "I love this country and it pains me to my soul to think of not being able to live here," Langford said. "This massacre has left us lost and destroyed. I ask God that it not be what defines our community."
"Deprive the fish of water," the president said, "so there are no longer young people who want to be cartel killers."
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