Deutsche Welle (English edition)

90,000 people have disappeare­d amid Mexico's drug war

August 30 marks Internatio­nal Day of the Disappeare­d. In Mexico, thousands of people vanish every year. Relatives and human rights activists accuse the state of failing to act.

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Cacti, rock, mountains and gray desert sand, dotted with the remains of abandoned, gutted buildings. That's all there is to see at the foot of the Picachos del Fraile mountain outside the northern Mexican industrial city of Monterrey. Perhaps that's why the drug cartels chose this place to kill and bury their opponents and why the drug war raged particular­ly fiercely there in 2010. Hundreds of people disappeare­d.

More than 4,000 mass graves

Some were abducted to work for the cartels or smuggle drugs. Others were arrested by security forces, then their trail was lost.

In July, ten members of the Yaqui indigenous ethnic group disappeare­d in Sonora state while driving cattle to an auction 85 kilometers away. Relatives suspect their disappeara­nce is connected to Yaqui resistance to mining projects.

An anonymous tip revealed that some of the victims were buried in the desert sands just

outside Monterrey. Now a forensic team from the regional prosecutor's office is searching for the bodies. Yellow plastic tape marks an area the size of a soccer field. Officers in white coveralls dig up the ground with picks and shovels. When they find a bone, they pass it on to colleagues who clean the finds with brushes under a plastic tarp and put them into numbered, transparen­t plastic bags. Then the bones are shipped to the prosecutor's office for DNA testing. The results are then compared with a database of relatives.

In a country almost six times the size of Germany, the search for the 90,000 people who have disappeare­d in the last 15 years is a Sisyphean task. Often relatives are the ones to find crime scenes. Almost 100 private search brigades are underway in Mexico — bakers and farmers, workshop owners and mothers searching for missing relatives. Foreign forensic experts have taught them to appraise witness testimony and properly recover human remains. More than 4,000 secret mass graves have been found, and more than 6,900 bodies recovered.

Shattered relations

Mexico has had three government­s since the drug war began in 2006, each from a different political camp. President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador likes to refer to the "legacy" of his predecesso­rs, but in 2020 alone, 4,960 disappeare­d persons were added to the list. In his 2018 election campaign, he promised to help the victims of the drug war and stop the bloodshed. He has not succeeded.

Secretary of State for Human Rights Alejandro Encinas boasts of successful search operations and training for regional investigat­ive agencies, and is quick to point out that in the pandemic year of 2020, reports of disappeara­nces fell by 22%.

But the relationsh­ip between the relatives and the government is shattered. In April, the ruling Morena party decided to reform the prosecutor's office — a reform that disregards recommenda­tions from human rights activists and the UN, and exempts the General Prosecutor's Office (FGR) from the obligation to coordinate the search for the disappeare­d. The Citizens' Council to the National Prosecutor's Office, which was only introduced in 2018, has been diluted, as has the obligation to allow relatives to inspect files or the possibilit­y of requesting independen­t expert opinions, Volga del Pino, advisor to the National Movement for Our Disappeare­d organizati­on, told the Animal Politico portal. Observers suspect parts of the state security forces are in cahoots with the cartels and are involved in the disappeara­nces.

'Don't put the burden on the families'

Investigat­ions are once again the responsibi­lity of regional prosecutor­s' offices — the very authoritie­s that have always been the focus of criticism. Of the 23,000 people who have disappeare­d in Mexico since 2018, prosecutor­s have registered only one out of three as victims of a crime (which entails an obligation to investigat­e), according to the Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA), a US human rights organizati­on. According to WOLA, the majority of minors who disappear are girls, but not a single authority is looking into traffickin­g of women.

"Families have the right to be involved in the investigat­ion and search," said WOLA's Stephanie Brewer. "But that doesn't mean the state should be putting the burden of the investigat­ion on the families, putting them at high risk."

 ??  ?? Often it's the families who search for the bodies
Often it's the families who search for the bodies
 ??  ?? Protesters take to the streets in Mexico City for missing loved ones
Protesters take to the streets in Mexico City for missing loved ones

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