REUTERS/Thibault Camus/Pool
Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto's own words "are coming back to haunt him," The New York Times writes.
When Sinaloa Cartel chief Joaquín Guzmán Loera was finally captured in June 2014 by the Mexican police after escaping from prison 13 years earlier, Peña Nieto assured the country it would never happen again.
Another escape "would be more than regrettable; it would be unforgivable for the government to not take the precautions to ensure that what happened last time would not be repeated." Peña Nieto told Univision TV.
Late Saturday, Guzmán slipped down a shaft into a mile-long ventilated tunnel constructed over the course of a year and vanished into his countrywide support network.
The Times notes that the Guzmán "not only broke out of what was supposed to be Mexico's most secure prison over the weekend, but it happened in the president's home state, a political stronghold where Mr. Peña Nieto served as governor before becoming president in 2012."
'The escape only underlines the cruel and bitter reality'
For many, Guzmán's escapes symbolize Peña Nieto's inability to rein in Mexico's rampant corruption as he promised he would upon taking office in 2012.
Mexico's escalating violence and insecurity has created a political crisis for the president, whose approval ratings hit a new low when 43 students from Ayotzinapa, a rural school in the southern state of Guerrero, were kidnapped last September.
The lack of transparency surrounding Peña Nieto's various finances and business dealings has also stirred controversy. His government's reputation has been tarnished by shady property dealings and several other scandals involving financial conflicts of interest.
"The lack of rule of
Attorney General's Office
Guzmán's first escape from prison in 2001 was less complex, however - he reportedly slipped past prison guards by hiding in a laundry cart (experts have speculated that the guards had been paid off).