NewsJanuary 17, 2017

CANCUN, Mexico -- A shooting attack at an electronic-music festival in Mexico's Caribbean coast resort of Playa del Carmen on Monday left five people dead, including two Canadians, an Italian and a Colombian, authorities said. The attorney general of Quintana Roo state said three of the dead were part of the security detail at the 10-day BPM electronic-music festival...

By GABRIEL ALCOCER ~ Associated Press
A first responder aids a woman wounded after a shooting early Monday at an electronic-music festival in the Caribbean coast resort of Playa del Carmen, Mexico.
A first responder aids a woman wounded after a shooting early Monday at an electronic-music festival in the Caribbean coast resort of Playa del Carmen, Mexico.Por Esto de Quintana Roo, via AP

CANCUN, Mexico -- A shooting attack at an electronic-music festival in Mexico's Caribbean coast resort of Playa del Carmen on Monday left five people dead, including two Canadians, an Italian and a Colombian, authorities said.

The attorney general of Quintana Roo state said three of the dead were part of the security detail at the 10-day BPM electronic-music festival.

The fourth and fifth victims have not been identified.

Miguel Angel Pech said the shooting occurred about 2:30 a.m. outside the Blue Parrot nightclub, one of the BPM Festival's venues in Playa del Carmen, south of Cancun. It was apparently the festival's closing event.

Pech said a lone gunman apparently tried to enter the nightclub but was denied access because he had a gun.

A handwritten note thanking the security guards at the BPM electronic festival is attached Monday to flowers left at a barrier blocking the entrance to the Blue Parrot club in Playa del Carmen, Mexico. Several of the guards were killed in gunfire at the club.
A handwritten note thanking the security guards at the BPM electronic festival is attached Monday to flowers left at a barrier blocking the entrance to the Blue Parrot club in Playa del Carmen, Mexico. Several of the guards were killed in gunfire at the club.Rebecca Blackwell ~ Associated Press

The gunman began to exchange fire with another person inside, he said, and festival security personnel tried to stop the shooting and came under fire.

Pech said it was not a terrorist attack, and three people had been detained nearby, but it was unclear whether they had been involved in the shooting.

"We know of another shooting incident that occurred near the nightclub, but we are investigating whether that is related" to the nightclub shootings, Pech said.

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He said 20 bullet casings from three pistols had been found at the scene, and it was unclear whether the security detail had been armed or fired any of the weapons.

The government of the township that includes Playa de Carmen referred in a statement to "attackers who fired shots," but did not provide other details.

The shooting apparently caused a rush of people heading for the exits at the beach-side club, and the lone female victim apparently was killed during the stampede.

Pech said 15 people were injured, included one Mexican woman who was seriously injured. He said eight of the injured -- including two U.S. citizens and one Canadian -- had been treated for less-serious injuries at hospitals and released.

He said three people had been detained nearby, but it was unclear whether they had been involved in the shooting.

Rodolfo Del Angel, director of police in the state of Quintana Roo, told a Milenio TV station the shooting was the result of "a disagreement between people inside" the nightclub and said security guards had come under fire when they tried to contain the dispute.

The BPM Festival posted a statement saying four people had been killed and 12 injured in an attack that involved "a lone shooter."

BPM wrote, "The violence began on 12th street in front of the club, and three members of the BPM security team were among those whose lives were lost while trying to protect patrons inside the venue."

Playa del Carmen largely has been spared the violence that has hit other parts of Mexico.

Canada's Global Affairs office confirmed the death of one Canadian and said it was investigating reports of another. Italy's Foreign Ministry confirmed one its citizens died.

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