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Severed head found in Acapulco marks trend
Thu Jun 29, 2006 9:39 PM BST
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MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - A man's severed head dumped on the steps of city hall in the popular tourist resort of Acapulco on Thursday appeared to mark a gruesome upsurge in drug violence ahead of Mexico's presidential elections.

The head of a man aged about 35 was found with a handwritten note outside city offices in an area across town from the tourist strip of hotels and bars.

The note written on an orange card read: "Lazcano, so you carry on sending more of your idiots." It was signed with the letter "Z." It was not clear for whom the note was intended.

The Pacific coast playground, which became popular as an exotic escape for Hollywood stars in the 1950s, is in the middle of a bloody turf war between two cartels fighting for control of the lucrative drug trade.

More than two dozen people have been murdered in the battle this year. Police found the body of a second man dumped elsewhere in the city on Thursday.

Heavily armed enforcers for the Gulf cartel, dubbed the "Zetas," are battling a group known as the "Pelones," or "Baldies," loyal to a drug gang from the western state of Sinaloa.

The killing is the latest amid a surge of gruesome decapitations by warring drug gangs across Mexico, where voters will choose a new president on Sunday.

Last week, police found the severed heads of four men, three of them policemen, left in plastic bags in the gritty border city of Tijuana, south of San Diego, California.

In Acapulco in April, killers left the severed heads of two policemen outside Guerrero state offices, with a note claiming the murders as a reprisal for a police crackdown.

Mexican President Vicente Fox declared an all-out war on drug gangs in January 2005. Since then, more than 1,500 people have been shot, beaten or suffocated to death by the drug gangs.