Officials in Veracruz – the biggest prize in the gubernatorial races – report home attack, kidnapping and threatening text messages warning people not to vote

This article is more than 4 years old

This article is more than 4 years old

Government and political leaders reported scattered incidents of election-related violence in Mexico on Sunday, as 12 states voted for new governors.

Mexico elections cast light on governors – and state systems built on corruption Read more

In Veracruz, a two-party alliance backing an opposition candidate complained of attacks against party members in seven municipalities, including vehicles being burned and gasoline bombs thrown at a party office in the state capital of Xalapa.

José Mancha Alarcón, the state leader of the National Action party, said attackers burst into the home of the mayor of Acajete and set it on fire. In the town of Emiliano Zapata, near Xalapa, a severed human head was left in a park just steps from a polling station.

Veracruz state public security secretary Arturo Bermúdez confirmed that a driver for a local lawmaker was kidnapped. The lawmaker is part of the opposition alliance’s gubernatorial campaign.

Threatening text messages warning people not to vote were sent to cellphones in Veracruz.

The newspaper El Universal reported that attackers with clubs and stones damaged dozens of buses carrying campaign material in the Pacific coast state of Sinaloa. It said a mob in the southern state of Oaxaca burned some ballots and threatened to prevent polling stations from opening, while in Zacatecas a gasoline bomb was tossed at the door of the state congress.

Veracruz is the biggest prize in the gubernatorial elections, which could shape the fortunes of the country’s ruling Institutional Revolutionary party in its bid to hold on to the presidency in 2018.

In five of the 12 statehouses up for grabs, including Veracruz, the party has ruled uninterrupted for more than 80 years.