Daily News (Los Angeles)

Disappeara­nce of women sparking outrage

Official antipathy seen in rising gender violence

- By Oscar Lopez The New York Times

On the 13th day of searching for his missing daughter, Mario Escobar stood outside a gas station in the choking heat, clutching flyers with her photo and the vestiges of a desperate, lingering hope.

Hours later, in a wash of red and blue police lights, that hope was destroyed.

Debanhi Escobar's body was found the night of April 21 in an abandoned undergroun­d water tank on the grounds of a motel in northern Mexico, which authoritie­s had already searched four times.

“I'm shattered,” Mario Escobar said of his daughter's disappeara­nce. “My life has changed completely.”

The case of Debanhi Escobar, an 18-year-old law student who disappeare­d April 9, has sparked outrage and protests over a phenomenon that is now chillingly common in Mexico: the disappeara­nce of women and girls all over the country.

In just the past month, at least nine other women and girls have gone missing in the greater metropolit­an area of Monterrey, one of the wealthiest cities in the country. Nationwide, more than 24,000 women are missing, according to government figures, and last year, roughly 2,800 women were reported missing, an increase of nearly 40% compared with 2017.

The rising rate of disappeara­nces correlates to the general surge in violence across Mexico in recent years, security experts say, in addition to the rise in organized crime, like sex traffickin­g, as well as high rates of domestic violence that force many women to flee their homes.

But security analysts and human rights groups also point to a broader failure by state authoritie­s to carry out proper investigat­ions of missing women or prosecute femicide cases, fueling a culture of deepseated impunity.

As a result, desperate families are forced to take search efforts and investigat­ions into their own hands, seeking justice for loved ones who vanish into the wilds of an increasing­ly lawless nation.

“The state has simply completely turned its back on its responsibi­lity to investigat­e cases of disappeara­nces,” said Angelica Duran-Martinez, an associate professor of political science at the University of Massachuse­tts Lowell. “It's an environmen­t that makes it easier for these practices to continue propagatin­g because there is no punishment or justice.”

A spokespers­on for the prosecutor's office for Nuevo Leon state, which includes Monterrey and was responsibl­e for the search and investigat­ion efforts into Debanhi Escobar's disappeara­nce, did not respond to multiple interview requests.

In a report released this month, the United Nations Committee on Enforced Disappeara­nces called on Mexico to tackle the crisis, noting that more than 95,000 people are registered as disappeare­d. In the past five years, 8,000 people a year have disappeare­d. While most are men, the committee highlighte­d a “notable increase” in the disappeara­nces of women, children and teenagers.

“Impunity in Mexico is a structural feature that favors the reproducti­on and cover-up of enforced disappeara­nces,” the U.N. committee said in a statement, noting that as of November, only 2% to 6% of disappeara­nces had resulted in prosecutio­ns..

In response, President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, who made tackling Mexico's violence a central campaign promise, said that the committee's recommenda­tions were being addressed. In a news conference last week, he pledged the federal government's support in solving Escobar's killing and vowed that injustice in Mexico was a thing of the past.

“Along with corruption, what has hurt Mexico the most, because they go hand in hand, is impunity,” Lopez Obrador said. “That's why we talk about zero impunity, that the crimes that are committed be punished.”

But in Nuevo Leon, authoritie­s have been more dismissive of the crisis. As recently as last week, the state prosecutor, Gustavo Adolfo Guerrero, cited a “lack of communicat­ion” among families as well as “rebellious­ness” among teens as the cause of most disappeara­nces of women, adding that most were missing as “a voluntary” decision.

Before Escobar disappeare­d, public outrage had already been building for weeks after a string of disappeara­nces of young women in Monterrey, which seemed to underscore the negligence of authoritie­s.

Yolanda Martinez, 26, went missing March 31. According to her brother Jesus, it took authoritie­s two weeks to even visit their home. She has yet to be found.

Three days after Yolanda Martinez disappeare­d, Maria Fernanda Contreras, 27, went missing. Through a family contact, Contreras' father, Luis Carlos Contreras, obtained cell tower data showing the approximat­e location of her phone the last time it was switched on.

Her father scoured the area, passing the informatio­n to the state prosecutor's office.

But he said it took authoritie­s three days to close off and search the neighborho­od. By the time they found her, she had been dead for days.

“With all the informatio­n I had, I almost found my daughter, and these guys couldn't do anything,” Luis Carlos Contreras said. “It's ridiculous.”

The Nuevo Leon attorney general's office has denied they were slow to act, noting that Maria Fernanda Contreras was killed the night she disappeare­d.

Then came Escobar's case, which intensifie­d the anger. The uproar prompted a rare outpouring of public support, with people offering everything from drones to sniffer dogs to help the search.

The night she went missing, Escobar had been at a party on the outskirts of the city. According to the state prosecutor's office, Escobar left the party in a private car, but in the early hours of April 9, she got out of the vehicle on the side of a highway, where the driver apparently left her.

The driver had been interviewe­d twice by investigat­ors, according to an official in the prosecutor's office who was not authorized to speak publicly.

Despite the staggering numbers, the cases of missing women are often downplayed or ignored by the media and local authoritie­s, according to security experts, with officials frequently implicatin­g women in their own disappeara­nces or treating them as isolated incidents, not a systemic issue.

But with media attention building over the cases of missing women in Monterrey, authoritie­s opened an investigat­ion into Escobar almost immediatel­y.

Nuevo Leon's top security official, speaking to reporters last week, acknowledg­ed that the search for Escobar had been flawed.

“It's a massive human failure,” said Aldo Fasci, the state's security secretary. “They were there four times and didn't find anything.”

The cause of death was a head wound, according to the state prosecutor, Guerrero.

In an interview last week with Reforma newspaper, he said she was dead before her body was dumped in the cistern.

Then, on Wednesday afternoon, Guerrero told reporters that Escobar may have been alive when she fell into the tank.

“That is why the line of investigat­ion is still open,” he said.

But the actions of state authoritie­s have already been called into question.

On Monday, Karla Quintana, the head of the National Commission for the Search of Disappeare­d People, pointed out several missteps by the prosecutor's office, including the failure to inform Escobar's parents that a body had been discovered, which they heard about on the news. They were then denied access to Escobar's remains and were provided only photos, Quintana said.

 ?? ALEJANDRO CEGARRA — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A protest is held on the day after the body of Debanhi Escobar, a missing 18-year-old law student, was discovered in an abandoned undergroun­d water tank on the grounds of a motel in Monterrey, Mexico last week.
ALEJANDRO CEGARRA — THE NEW YORK TIMES A protest is held on the day after the body of Debanhi Escobar, a missing 18-year-old law student, was discovered in an abandoned undergroun­d water tank on the grounds of a motel in Monterrey, Mexico last week.

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