Gunmen stormed a drug rehabilitation center in central Mexico late Tuesday, killing four men and wounding two others, state officials reported Wednesday.
The attack occurred in Salamanca, a city in the violence-plagued state of Guanajuato, according to local authorities. The condition of the two wounded individuals remains unclear.
This incident highlights the ongoing security challenges in Guanajuato, which has the highest homicide rate of any state in Mexico. The region has been a battleground for a bloody turf war between the Jalisco New Generation Cartel and the local Santa Rosa de Lima Cartel.
“These attacks on rehabilitation centers are tragically not uncommon,” said a security analyst who requested anonymity due to safety concerns. “They often serve as proxy battlefields in the wider cartel conflicts.”
Mexico’s privately run drug rehabilitation centers, often unregulated and underfunded, have been frequent targets of similar attacks. In 2020, gunmen killed 27 people at a rehab facility in Irapuato, another Guanajuato city. A decade earlier, 19 people died in an attack on a center in Chihuahua, northern Mexico.
Experts point to several factors contributing to the vulnerability of these facilities. Lack of government funding for rehabilitation services often leaves unregistered centers as the only option for poor families seeking help for addicted relatives. Inadequate regulation and oversight of private centers further compound the issue. These clinics sometimes serve as refuges for addicts and dealers fleeing street violence, making them potential targets for rival gangs.
The Mexican government’s limited investment in rehabilitation programs has left a gap that these often clandestine and potentially abusive centers attempt to fill. This latest attack underscores the urgent need for improved security measures and increased support for legitimate drug treatment facilities.