Los Angeles Times

In Mexico, impunity for migrant deaths

Nation has shown little will to punish perpetrato­rs of crimes against people crossing the country

- By Kate Linthicum and Leila Miller Cecilia Sanchez in The Times’ Mexico City bureau contribute­d to this report.

MEXICO CITY — A day after 55 migrants who were being smuggled through Mexico died in a tractortra­iler crash, officials here promised justice.

“There will be no impunity,” said Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard, vowing that Mexico would take “immediate action” against the human trafficker­s who had packed nearly 200 migrants into a truck that careened into a bridge in the state of Chiapas on Thursday.

Such a prosecutio­n would be rare in a country that has shown little will or ability to punish those responsibl­e for crimes against migrants.

For decades, people traversing the 1,000-mile stretch between Mexico’s southern and northern borders have suffered unspeakabl­e abuses — rapes, kidnapping­s and massacres, in addition to crashes — and the perpetrato­rs have rarely been brought to justice.

“Mexican authoritie­s have generally failed to secure justice for violence against migrants, from daily abuses and extortion to massacres and disappeara­nces,” said Stephanie Brewer, director for Mexico and migrant rights at the Washington Office on Latin America.

Among the crimes that have gone unpunished were two massacres in the state of Tamaulipas — in 2010 and 2011 — in which criminal gangs slaughtere­d a total of 265 migrants.

And nobody has been held accountabl­e for a 2019 crash in Chiapas in which a truck packed with Guatemalan migrants careened off a highway, killing 23 and injuring 33.

Experts say such impunity is largely a product of the broader dysfunctio­n of Mexico’s justice system, in which the vast majority of crimes go unpunished.

Corruption also plays a key role in the country’s dismal record on prosecutin­g human trafficker­s.

It’s common knowledge that smugglers pay off authoritie­s at every level — from local police to members of the National Guard and Mexican immigratio­n agents.

Last year, more than 1,000 officials with the country’s immigratio­n agency, the National Migration Institute, were referred to internal affairs or forced to resign over corruption allegation­s.

“The authoritie­s are involved in human smuggling,” said Margarita Nuñez, a migration expert at the Ibero-American University in Mexico City. “The networks of corruption reach the government.”

A thorough investigat­ion into Thursday’s crash would likely implicate not only the people who recruited the migrants and facilitate­d their journey north but also the officials who allow trucks crammed with migrants to pass through the immigratio­n checkpoint­s that are omnipresen­t in southern Mexico.

“It’s almost impossible to fight against the machinery of human smuggling that involves the state,” said Daniela Gutierrez Escobedo, an immigratio­n attorney in Mexico City.

Also contributi­ng to impunity may be the reluctance of many migrants to report crimes or serve as witnesses against the smugglers they or their families contracted.

On Friday, Mexican investigat­ors descended on the scene of the crash along with officials from Guatemala, where many of the victims were from.

Investigat­ors have said that the truck’s driver was speeding near the city of Tuxtla Gutiérrez when he hit a curve and careened into a bridge.

In the overturned trailer, rescuers found a bloody pile of bodies — some alive, some dead. They told local journalist­s that some survivors limped away instead of receiving medical treatment, afraid of being captured by immigratio­n authoritie­s.

When he took office in 2018, Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador promised a more humane immigratio­n policy. He proposed funding antipovert­y programs in Central America and expanding opportunit­ies for asylum seekers to settle in Mexico.

Instead, under heavy pressure from the United States to crack down on a wave of “caravans” of Central Americans walking north together on foot, López Obrador sent thousands of troops to guard Mexico’s southern border.

Migration experts say the militariza­tion of the border has forced record numbers of migrants into the arms of transnatio­nal smuggling networks that sometimes charge as much as $10,000 a person for the trip north.

“Current policies, which focus disproport­ionately on trying to block migration through detention and the use of force, only drive migrants to travel in clandestin­e, unsafe conditions like those seen in this devastatin­g case,” Brewer said.

Packing migrants into dark, sweltering tractortra­ilers has become one of the smugglers’ favorite techniques.

In October, authoritie­s in Tamaulipas found 652 migrants, mostly from Central America, jammed into a convoy of six cargo trucks heading toward the U.S. border.

Last month, officials discovered 600 people in two tractor-trailers in Veracruz.

 ?? Associated Press ?? RESCUE WORKERS move an injured woman from the site of a tractor-trailer crash in the Mexican state of Chiapas on Thursday. At least 55 people were killed and dozens injured when a truck smuggling migrants careened into a bridge near the city of Tuxtla Gutiérrez.
Associated Press RESCUE WORKERS move an injured woman from the site of a tractor-trailer crash in the Mexican state of Chiapas on Thursday. At least 55 people were killed and dozens injured when a truck smuggling migrants careened into a bridge near the city of Tuxtla Gutiérrez.

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