Bangkok Post

Migrant disappeara­nces soar

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MEXICO CITY: Reported cases of missing migrants in Mexico jumped nearly fourfold in 2021 from 2020, as the country struggles to stem the flow of undocument­ed people from Central America to the United States, according to a report released Wednesday.

The number of missing foreigners grew by 292% to 349 from 89 cases, said the report presented by the Jesuits’ Missing Migrant Search Program (SJM), a human rights organisati­on.

Hundreds of thousands of migrants traverse Mexico every year hoping to reach the United States, often becoming the victims of kidnapping­s, murders and other crimes.

“There are places where drug cartels lie in wait for migrants to pull them into their ranks,” said Luis Macias, director of SJM in Mexico.

Most of the missing came from countries including Honduras, El Salvador, Guatemala, Cuba, Ecuador and Venezuela.

According to the report 44% of the missing migrants were between 18 and 29 years old, 42% between 30 and 59 years old, and 14% were under the age of 17.

Mexico’s National Migration Institute did not immediatel­y respond a request for comment.

Of those people who go missing but are later located, the SJM said that 75% were found either in an immigratio­n detention centre somewhere or in temporary housing.

The report stressed there is still significan­t under-reporting of migrant disappeara­nces in Mexico, worsened by a lack of public informatio­n made available by government agencies responsibl­e for finding those who have vanished seemingly without trace.

“Policies aimed at disrupting migration flows have increased cases of detention and of [the migrants] not being able to communicat­e, and consequent­ly the number of disappeara­nces reported by relatives have increased,” said Adrian Estrada, SJM’s coordinato­r for migrant assistance in the capital, Mexico City.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Asylum-seeking migrants from Nicaragua lock arms as they wade across the Rio Grande River into the US from Mexico, in Roma, Texas on Wednesday.
REUTERS Asylum-seeking migrants from Nicaragua lock arms as they wade across the Rio Grande River into the US from Mexico, in Roma, Texas on Wednesday.

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