Another mother searching for her disappeared son has been killed in Mexico, the sixth killing of a volunteer search activist in Mexico since the start of 2021.
The volunteer search group “A Promise to be Kept” said that Teresa Magueyal was killed on Tuesday in the violence-torn city of Celaya, in the northcentral state of Guanajuato.
The state prosecutor’s office said it was still investigating the report and could not confirm it.
It was the second such killing in Guanajuato in less than six months.
Volunteer searcher Maria Vazquez Ramirez was shot to death in November last year in Abasolo.
“In Guanajuato, we women searchers are not safe, they kill us in broad daylight, in public, with total impunity,” Magueyal’s group said in a statement, calling the killing “cowardly.”
The motive in the killing remained unclear. Most searchers say they are looking for the bodies of their children, not evidence to convict their killers.
Magueyal was searching for her son, Jose Luis Magueyal, who disappeared in 2020. Mexico has more than 112,000 missing people, and relatives of the disappeared often have to search for them because of police inaction.
Police in Mexico often lack the time, expertise or interest to look for the clandestine grave sites where gangs frequently bury them.
Much of that effort has been left to volunteer search teams known as “colectivos” made up of mothers of the missing, who often call themselves “Searching Mothers.”
Santa Rosa de Lima and the Jalisco cartel have carried out a years-long turf war for control of Guanajuato. They kill off rivals, kidnapping victims and innocent people and hide their bodies in mass graves or body dumping grounds.
The problem is not limited to Guanajuato. In October last year, attackers in the central city of Puebla shot to death Esmeralda Gallardo, who led efforts to find her missing 22-year-old daughter.
Many mothers pursue their own investigations or join search teams that, often acting on tips, cross gullies and fields, sinking iron rods into the ground to detect the telltale stench of decomposing bodies.
The searchers, and the police who sometimes accompany them, usually focus on finding graves and identifying remains. Search groups sometimes even receive anonymous tips about where bodies are buried, knowledge probably available only to the killers or their accomplices.
Airlines in Australia, Hong Kong, India, Malaysia and Singapore yesterday canceled flights to and from the Indonesian island of Bali, after a nearby volcano catapulted an ash tower into the sky. Australia’s Jetstar, Qantas and Virgin Australia all grounded flights after Mount Lewotobi Laki-Laki on Flores island spewed a 9km tower a day earlier. Malaysia Airlines, AirAsia, India’s IndiGo and Singapore’s Scoot also listed flights as canceled. “Volcanic ash poses a significant threat to safe operations of the aircraft in the vicinity of volcanic clouds,” AirAsia said as it announced several cancelations. Multiple eruptions from the 1,703m twin-peaked volcano in
A plane bringing Israeli soccer supporters home from Amsterdam landed at Israel’s Ben Gurion airport on Friday after a night of violence that Israeli and Dutch officials condemned as “anti-Semitic.” Dutch police said 62 arrests were made in connection with the violence, which erupted after a UEFA Europa League soccer tie between Amsterdam club Ajax and Maccabi Tel Aviv. Israeli flag carrier El Al said it was sending six planes to the Netherlands to bring the fans home, after the first flight carrying evacuees landed on Friday afternoon, the Israeli Airports Authority said. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu also ordered
Former US House of Representatives speaker Nancy Pelosi said if US President Joe Biden had ended his re-election bid sooner, the Democratic Party could have held a competitive nominating process to choose his replacement. “Had the president gotten out sooner, there may have been other candidates in the race,” Pelosi said in an interview on Thursday published by the New York Times the next day. “The anticipation was that, if the president were to step aside, that there would be an open primary,” she said. Pelosi said she thought the Democratic candidate, US Vice President Kamala Harris, “would have done
Farmer Liu Bingyong used to make a tidy profit selling milk but is now leaking cash — hit by a dairy sector crisis that embodies several of China’s economic woes. Milk is not a traditional mainstay of Chinese diets, but the Chinese government has long pushed people to drink more, citing its health benefits. The country has expanded its dairy production capacity and imported vast numbers of cattle in recent years as Beijing pursues food self-sufficiency. However, chronically low consumption has left the market sloshing with unwanted milk — driving down prices and pushing farmers to the brink — while