ROUGH CUT (NO REPORTER NARRATION)<br/> <br />More than a thousand people marched through the streets of the capital of captured Mexican drug lord Joaquin "Shorty" Guzman's home state on Wednesday (February 26), calling for his freedom.<br/> <br />The largely young crowd, many dressed in white, bore signs that read "We want Shorty Freed" as they filed across the centre of Culiacan, in the north-western state of Sinaloa, to a church on a palm tree-lined plaza.<br/> <br />Boys donned white t-shirts scrawled with messages written in marker pen in support for "El Chapo," his nickname in Spanish. Teenage girls in school uniform chanted "Chapo, Chapo."<br/> <br />Guzman, who rose from humble origins to become one of the most powerful drug barons in history, was captured on Saturday in a raid in the beachside resort and fishing center of Mazatlan, 125 miles southeast of Culiacan.<br/> <br />Brass bands played songs known to be favorites of Guzman, Mexico's most wanted man and Chicago's first public enemy No. 1 since n