Armored vehicles and trucks are standing on the dirt road endlessly, and heavily armed people in combat uniforms and bulletproof vests scream arms and scream in front of the vehicle.

They look like soldiers without fail, but they are members of the Mexican drug cartels.

In Mexico, on the 17th (local time), about two minutes of video that started to run on social media such as Twitter is believed to have been disseminated by the Mexican drug organization'Harisco New Generation Cartel' (CJNG).

The words CJNG are written on the battle suits and vehicles in the video, and armed people are shouting at cameras such as'Mencho's men' and'Mencho's hooray'.

``(L)Mencho'' is the nickname of CJNG boss Nemesio Osegera.

CJNG is currently the most notorious organization in Mexico.

With a dominant market in synthetic drugs such as fentanyl and methamphetamine, it is surpassing the shrine of Sinaloa Cartel, led by Joaquin Gusman (aka El Chapo), a drug king in prison in the United States.

Most of all, they are engaged in brutal attacks aimed at public authorities, such as the military and police.

Last month, in Mexico City, the capital city, the police chief of Mexico City indiscriminately shot three people, including citizens and police officers, but the couple killed a couple of days ago, a federal judge in the province of Colima, who was named CJNG.

In areas with high CJNG influence, military and police are also afflicted with ambush attacks and death.

Many of the Mexican murders that have recently hit a record high are CJNG attacks against public authorities and rivals.

The US government, which paid 10 million dollars (approximately 12.5 billion won) to boss Osagera, referred to CJNG as "one of the five most dangerous multinational criminal organizations in the world."

The video of CJNG was unveiled during the course of Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Odoror's visit to areas where crimes were concentrated in order to respond to increasingly serious crimes.

President Lopez Obrador has visited Guanajuato, Jalisco, and Colima, where crime rates are high, highlighting the willingness to combat crime, all of which are influential in CJNG.

At a news conference in Jalisco on the 16th, the president said, "I will continue to fight crime. I will not be afraid."

President Lopez Obrador has maintained a relatively modest response, saying that the former regime's anti-narcotics operation increased crime as if it had been beehive.

"The CJN is sending a clear message that they dominate Mexico, not the president," said Mike Vigil of the US Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA). I made it," said Reuters.

After the video was released, Mexican security minister Alfonso Duraso said on Twitter that he was "analyzing to confirm the authenticity of the video and when it was filmed," and that "no criminal organization has the ability to challenge the force of the federal government."

(Yonhap News, photo = Twitter capture)