Mexican troops have been patrolling streets of major towns in Michoacan
Mexican
authorities have said top security officials will be replaced in the
western state of Michoacan that has recently been rocked by violence.
Hundreds of troops have recently been deployed to restore order after groups of vigilantes clashed with a drug gang.
But many vigilantes are refusing to heed the government's call to disarm.
This is despite reassurances by the federal government that
the "self-defence groups" are not the target of an ongoing security
operation.
Governor Fausto Vallejo says Jose Godoy will succeed Marco
Aguilera as attorney general, while Carlos Castellanos will replace
Alberto Reyes as police chief.
Interior minister Miguel Angel Osorio Chong said earlier this
week that he wanted to convince the vigilantes that "we are going to do
our job".
He said that the security forces had identified the three top
leaders of the Knights Templar drug cartel and were hunting them down.
Two alleged members of the cartel were arrested on Wednesday, but the self-defence groups dismissed them as "minor players".
The vigilantes accuse the government of not doing enough to
protect locals from the extortion and violence carried out by the gang.
The Knights Templar, who claim to protect the local
population from attacks from rival gangs, have accused the self-defence
groups of siding with the New Generation drug cartel based in
neighbouring Jalisco state.
They say the fact that some of the vigilantes are carrying
powerful assault weapons shows they are not local farmers but are in the
pay of the New Generation gang.