The shootings, kidnappings, fires, have forced a touch of self -imposed by the inhabitants, to hundreds of businesses to close before the night falls and others to stop making their daily lives.
The noise of the streets was replaced by the silence caused by fear.
Cristina Reyes, former president of the College of Economists, remember that, although the Sinaloans try to make their daily lives, for months people have decided not to leave their home for fear of being a victim of violence.
“We continue to live, we continue trying to make our life more or less normal, but that does not mean that there have been no different stages. One of the stages when this began was a practically total closure of the economy in which there were whole days when people did not leave their home, in which going through a water jan was very complicated. You saw trucks of armed people, trucks everywhere and burns of trucks, cars,” says.
Culiacán even surpassed Ecatepec, State of Mexico, in perception of insecurity.
