Murder, rape, and dismemberment plague Mexico — but nearly 95 percent of crimes go unpunished
Albinson
Linares, Noticias Telemundo
October 12, 2021
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/violent-crimes-rise-in-mexico-94-8-go-unpunished/ar-AAPosdc
MEXICO CITY — The corpses of three people, dismembered
and burned, were found in bags in Abasolo, in the state of Guanajuato, on Sept.
2. Three days later, a trans woman was murdered in the same state, and the
body of a man, burned and tortured, was found hanging from a tree in Coacalco
state. On Sept. 7, more than 300 migrants who had been kidnapped were rescued
in Aguascalientes, and on Sept. 19, an entire family in Chihuahua was killed
and an explosive package in Guanajuato was caused the deaths of two men.
The list of bloody events seems endless, but it's only
a sample of the 438 acts of extreme violence that the Mexican nongovernmental
organization Causa en Común registered in September, the deadliest month this
year.
Researchers estimate that the rise in extreme violence
has left 6,314 people injured or dead in the first seven months of 2021.
The group said in its new report on Atrocities
Registered in the Media that there have been at
least 800 cases of torture this year, in addition to 640 incidents of
dismemberment, mutilations, and destruction of corpses, the discoveries of
502 clandestine graves, 418 massacres and 341 murders of women that were
perpetrated with extreme cruelty.
“It seems very serious to us because it is not only
terrible that people are murdered in Mexico, but how they are murdered,” said
Luis Sánchez Díaz, a researcher at Causa en Común, which defends rights and
freedoms. “This type of news is not just another figure, and it is very
unfortunate that we are beginning to normalize this type of violence.”
Every month, the group counts the “atrocities”
recorded in the media, defined as events in which there is “the intentional use of
physical force to cause death, laceration or extreme mistreatment.”
The organization warned that it bases its numbers only
on journalists' reports, so “there will be an undetermined number of atrocities
that were not registered.”
Sánchez Díaz said: “We see that the country is
becoming more militarized with the actions of the National Guard, [yet] there
is an increase in violence. It is absurd to think that the country is
becoming more peaceful when, on average, 97 people are murdered every
day.”
National Defense Secretary Luis Cresencio Sandoval has
said recently that the army has deployed 28,395 troops — among them 6,244 on
the southern border and 7,419 on the northern border with the U.S.
“Keeping the military in the streets and not fighting
corruption affects everything,” Guadalupe Correa-Cabrera, a specialist in
criminal organizations at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia, told
Noticias Telemundo. She wasn’t involved in the Causa en Común investigation.
While violence has exploded in the country as the
justice system has deteriorated, suffering from “many limitations,” President
Andrés Manuel López Obrador’s administration inherited the effects of former
President Felipe Calderón’s war against drugs, Correa-Cabrera said.
“Atrocities such as extortion, kidnapping, torture, and
murder occur throughout the country, but nothing happens. However, it is
not something new, because this was seen in previous governments. It is enough
to look at past figures to understand that it is an enormous challenge,” she
said.
Migration and massacres
The report found that massacres (killings of three or
more people) peaked in July when 67 were recorded and that the high
monthly tallies continue. The researchers warned that there is a
relationship between the
events and the presence of migrants in Mexico.
“It seems important to us to point out that this
increase in victims is due to the fact that there is an escalation of violence not
only against the country’s population but also against migrants,” Sánchez Díaz
said, speaking about the proliferation of kidnappings and violent
incidents against people who are passing through Mexico as they migrate north
to the U.S.
The National Migration Institute has rescued 19,162
migrants who were victims of organized crime, many of them Central Americans.
From Aug. 21 to Sept. 20 alone, the army rescued 63,614 migrants.
“We live in fear because it is a very corrupt
area. All the people tell you that the cartels impose the rules, the
drug is the law,” said Yorje Pérez Moreno, a Venezuelan
migrant who was extorted during his stay in Mexico this year.
Human Rights First, a Washington-based
organization, has recorded
6,356 violent attacks against migrants who had been
deported to Mexico since January — including rape, kidnapping, extortion, human
trafficking, and other attacks.
A rise in femicides
The worst month so far has been May, when 62 cases
involved the violent murders of women. Sánchez Díaz said it’s a worrying trend
that worsens each month.
“It is often said that many of these deaths are linked
to organized crime, but we see that most cases of violence against women
have to do with their partners or with a circle close to them,” Sánchez
Díaz said.
The highest number of femicides during López Obrador’s
administration came in August, when 107 were registered, according to data from
the Ministry of Security and Citizen Protection. It is also the highest
number since 2015.
Femicides increased by 8 percent from January to
August compared to the same period last year.
“There is a growing trend in the murders of women, but
it is not well reflected, because in Mexico very few are classified as
femicides,” said Patricia Olamendi, a feminist activist and human rights
expert. “The majority classify them as intentional or culpable
homicides. But if we add these three situations, we have an average
of 20 murders of women a day.”
An ‘almost total’ impunity
In a report
published last week, Hallazgos 2020 (“hallazgos” means
“findings”), the think tank México Evalúa found that 94.8 percent of
the cases reported in Mexico go unpunished.
“It is a criminal justice system that does not respond
to the demands of citizens because it has been left in distress. There is no
political leadership to correct the deficiencies and allocate the resources
that are required,” said Chrístel Rosales, a researcher for the organization's
justice program.
The report found that 93.3 percent of cases aren’t
reported to authorities and that of the small percentage that is, 95 percent
go unpunished. The attorney general’s office initiated 38,855
investigations last year, 60 percent fewer than in 2019.
Although the investigation takes the coronavirus
pandemic into account, experts say the population’s distrust of the justice
system and its limitations also has an impact.
It is a bleak scenario because only three-tenths of 1
percent of cases are resolved. “It is almost total impunity,” Rosales said.
More women detained, and with longer
sentences
The México Evalúa report found that women experience
inequality in the penal system because their rights are less respected.
When they testify, they are pressured to give other
versions of events to a greater extent than men. In addition, fewer are
afforded their rights, and 1 in 2 women are deprived of their freedom while
awaiting a sentence.
“The justice system is treating women differently, in
a negative sense. ... For example, they are given more extensive sentences than
men, especially in sentences greater than 21 years, because two-thirds are
women,” Rosales said.
The problem is structural. Men dominate the judicial system,
which widens the gaps and the inequalities.
“There is still a sexual division of labor. Women
are assigned lower positions that are more administrative or
secretarial, while positions of decision-making, research, and strategic
planning are occupied by men,” Rosales said.
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