Jamaica Gleaner

Five migrants survived January massacre of 19

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GUATEMALAN AUTHORITIE­S said Tuesday that five migrants survived the January 22 massacre of 19 people, including 16 Guatemalan­s, in northern Mexico.

Foreign Minister Pedro Brolo said the five are being interviewe­d about the killings, whose motive still remains unclear.

The migrants were being taken towards the US border by people smugglers when one or two of the trucks came under fire, apparently from a state police unit.

But it was unclear whether the survivors had been close enough in the convoy to shed light on why police would have killed the migrants along with two armed smugglers’ guards.

A dozen state police officers have been charged in the killings in the township of Camargo. Two trucks were set on fire and the victims’ bodies were so badly charred that identifica­tion has taken weeks. The bodies of 16 Guatemalan­s and two Mexicans have been identified; the 19th body is still undergoing tests.

Brolo said the 16 bodies identified so far are expected to be returned to Guatemala around March 19. Mexican authoritie­s asked for enough time to conduct forensic tests to strengthen their case.

72 MIGRANTS MURDERED

The killings revived memories of the 2010 massacre of 72 migrants near the town of San Fernando in the same gangridden border state of Tamaulipas. Those killings were done by a drug cartel, while the January 22 slayings allegedly were carried out by law enforcemen­t.

But the two cases were similar: The 2010 massacre came to light in part because there were survivors. One, a wounded migrant from Ecuador who played dead, managed to make it to a military checkpoint.

Officials later said those migrants were killed after refusing an offer to work for a drug cartel, informatio­n that apparently came from the survivors.

Cartels in Mexico often charge migrant smugglers for crossing their territory and kidnap or kill migrants whose smugglers have paid a rival gang. Camargo is in an area that has been bloodied for years by turf battles between the remnants of the Gulf cartel and the old Zetas cartel.

 ?? AP ?? In this January 27 photo, German and Maria Tomas pose for a photo holding a framed portrait of their grandson Ivan Gudiel who they believe is one of the charred corpses found on a rural road on the Mexico-us border township of Camargo, at their home in Comitancil­lo, Guatemala.
AP In this January 27 photo, German and Maria Tomas pose for a photo holding a framed portrait of their grandson Ivan Gudiel who they believe is one of the charred corpses found on a rural road on the Mexico-us border township of Camargo, at their home in Comitancil­lo, Guatemala.

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