The Mexican attorney general's office has said it has arrested seven officials over suspected involvement in the jail break of drug kingpin Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman.
Guzman's escape last Saturday from a maximum security prison through a mile-long tunnel built into his cell was a profound embarrassment for Mexico's president Enrique Pena Nieto, and raised pressure on the government to do more to battle public sector corruption.
As the tunnel surfaced in a blind spot in the cell behind a shower wall, government officials said it could only have occurred with the collusion of prison guards and officials, and that Guzman’s helpers must have seen the building’s plans.
The government dismissed the head of the prison and questioned more than 30 prison officials over the escape.
It did not name the seven people who were arrested and a government spokesman could not immediately clarify the matter.
Mr Pena Nieto, returning from a visit to France, acknowledged that the escape had caused widespread frustration and that the only way to undo the damage was to recapture Guzman.
Extradition
Separately, the government said the US had requested the extradition of Guzman about two weeks before the breakout took place.
The news hinted at a u-turn by the Mexican government, as the previous attorney general had said in January that the country had no plans to hand him over.
Opposition senator Juan Carlos Romero Hicks said if Mexico did recapture Guzman, extraditing him would be tantamount to admitting it was incapable of keeping him locked up.
“National sovereignty and national pride are so important . . . that I doubt the government will do it,” he said.
Reuters