Mexico president says U.S. extradition requests against Sinaloa governor and others require “overwhelming evidence”


MEXICO CITY, April 30 (Reuters) – Mexico’s president Claudia Sheinbaum said on Thursday that if the ‌U.S. government presents sufficient evidence against Sinaloa ‌Governor Ruben Rocha and others charged in the U.S. for ​ties to drug trafficking, the Mexican prosecutor’s office will proceed according to the law.

But, she added, if there is not enough proof then the charges from ‌the U.S. Department ⁠of Justice appear political in nature. She also said that under no terms would ⁠Mexico permit interference of a foreign government in its sovereign affairs.

The Justice Department on Wednesday charged Rocha ​and ​others for conspiring with ​the Sinaloa Cartel to ‌import massive quantities of narcotics into the U.S. in exchange for political support and bribes.

The charges against Rocha mark a new front in the U.S. fight against cartels. While the U.S. has repeatedly gone ‌after drug kingpins, U.S. indictments ​against sitting senior Mexican politicians ​are rare.

“We are ​not going to protect anyone who ‌has committed a crime,” Sheinbaum ​said at ​her regular morning press conference. “However, if there isn’t clear evidence, it is obvious that the objective ​of these ‌indictments by the Department of Justice is ​political.”

(Reporting by Ana Isabel Martinez and Raul Cortez; ​Editing by Emily Green)



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