The Borneo Post

Mexicans march for their missing children on Mother’s Day

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MEXICO CITY: Mexicans with missing children led marches on Friday — when Mother’s Day is celebrated here — to protest the government’s failure to find their sons and daughters or bring their cases to justice.

There are more than 40,000 missing persons in Mexico, which has been hit by a wave of violent crime in recent years linked to powerful drug cartels.

Protesters marched in 16 cities — including around 2,000 people in the capital — to voice their outrage and anguish over the thousands of clandestin­e graves that have been discovered in the country, and the tens of thousands of other missing persons who have never been found.

“I’ve been crying for the past eight years. I just want to know what happened to him,” said Maria Guadalupe Aguilar, 64, a demonstrat­or at the Mexico City march whose eldest son, Jose Luis, disappeare­d in 2011 on his way to a business meeting in the city of Guadalajar­a. We’re raising our voices so that what happened to our children doesn’t keep happening,” said a sobbing Lourdes de la Cruz, 61, whose youngest son, Daniel, disappeare­d in the city of Coatzacoal­cos along with 30other people in 2015, when he was 21.

The mothers carried large photograph­s of their missing children, shouting to passersby, “It could be your children, too.”

President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador gave a Mother’s Day message at a press conference, in which he said he was thinking especially of “the mothers who are looking for their missing children.”

 ??  ?? Maria Cristina holds a photo of her son Manuel as mothers and relatives march to demand justice for their missing relatives on Mother’s Day in Mexico City, Mexico. — Reuters photo
Maria Cristina holds a photo of her son Manuel as mothers and relatives march to demand justice for their missing relatives on Mother’s Day in Mexico City, Mexico. — Reuters photo

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