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Jan. 2009 News
Mexico
|
 |
|
Senator
Manlio Fabio Beltrones
(PRI Party)
Photo: Oswaldo Ramírez - Milenio Online |
Calderón atora la ley contra la trata de
personas: Beltrones
La demora deja
abierto un espacio de impunidad a la delincuencia organizada
El atraso de más
de ocho meses impide la creación de la Comisión Secretarial, indica.
Acusan al Presidente de no cumplir con los compromisos
internacionales.
Senator Beltrones: Mexico’s Human Trafficking
Law is Stuck Thanks to President Calderon's Refusal to Act
The delay leaves a wide open space for impunity and organized crime,
and
prevents the creation of the [inter-agency]
Secretarial Commission [required by the law].
Members of Congress accuse the President of
failing to comply with Mexico’s international commitments.
The coordinator of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) in
the Senate of the Republic, Senator Manlio Fabio Beltrones, has
accused President Felipe Calderón of causing the national law
against human trafficking to become 'stuck' because of the
President’s refusal to publish federal regulations to actually
implement the law.
Senator Beltrones stated that the situation reflects a lack of
willingness by the President to honor Mexico’s international
commitments in the midst of the current wave of violence plaguing
the country. The Senator added that there should be no more excuses
for inaction on the issue.
In
a meeting with members of the Confederation of National Popular
Organizations (CNOP) and the group’s leader Marco Antonio Bernal,
PRI party members expressed concern about the fact that the tools
that Congress has given to the government to fight this violence
have been
kept in the freezer.
In
a press release, the PRI block in the Senate summarized their
meeting with the CNOP and expressed their regret that the Senate's
attempt to provide legal instruments to the Mexican Government
to tackle this crime against humanity [human trafficking] have so
far been incomplete, due to the defiance of the executive branch in
regard to issuing the needed regulations.
The press release urged President Calderon to rush the law's
regulations to publication, given that these delays are leaving
open a space of impunity for organized crime.
"The delay of over eight months in issuing the regulations, which
the law had required to be in place by May 21, 2008, has prevented
the formation of the inter-agency Secretarial Committee to be
established by the National Program to Prevent and Punish
Trafficking in Persons," Senator Beltran said...
Further Background
• The
PRI in the Senate last week issued a
warning in the Standing Committee of Congress that requires
President Felipe Calderón to issue the regulations of the Law to Prevent
and Punish Trafficking in Persons.
• It
is the fourth warning made to President
Calderon, with the first three having been issued on July 8, September
10 and December 4, of 2008 respectively. These
previous calls to action went unanswered by President Calderon.
• The
warning signed by the PRI states that: "The
Federal Executive has committed a serious omission
for not having issued the regulations that will activate the
law," .
Full English Translation
El coordinador
del PRI en el Senado, Manlio Fabio Beltrones, denunció que el
presidente Felipe Calderón ha atorado por ocho meses la promulgación
del reglamento de la ley para prevenir y sancionar la trata de
personas, lo que denota una falta de compromisos internacionales en
medio de la violencia que azota al país, y no debe haber más
pretextos para emitirlo.
Al reunirse con
integrantes de la CNOP encabezados por su dirigente, Marco Antonio
Bernal, los priistas manifestaron su preocupación por la crisis de
violencia que se ha generado a escala nacional y porque los
instrumentos que le ha dado el Congreso al gobierno se mantengan en
la congeladora.
En un
comunicado, la bancada tricolor reveló lo ocurrido en la reunión de
Beltrones con cenopistas, en la que el propio líder senatorial
lamentó que el esfuerzo del Legislativo por proveer de instrumentos
jurídicos al Estado mexicano para hacer frente a este delito de lesa
humanidad haya quedado, hasta ahora, “incompleto por la actitud
omisa del Ejecutivo federal” en la expedición del reglamento...
Angelica Mercado
Milenio Online
Jan. 26, 2009
Costa Rica
 |
|
Sign: Machista judges: Violence
against women is always a crime! |
Costa Rica
Urgent Campaign: Violence Against Women Is Always
a Crime
In a
divided vote, the Costa Rican Supreme Court’s constitutional
division, the Sala IV, declared unconstitutional the two types of
abuse most commonly punished under the Law to Penalize Violence
Against Women: physical abuse and emotional violence. The justices
decided that this aggression does not result in incapacitating
injuries and that verbal abuse, insults and systematic aggression
are endured by thousands of women everyday through out the country.
In light
of this tremendous setback, a campaign entitled “Violence Against
Women Is Always a Crime” has been launched to denounce the ruling of
Costa Rica’s Supreme Court. Promoted by the Red Feminista Contra la
Violencia Hacia las Mujeres (Feminist Network Against Violence
Against Women) and developed by the
Centro Feminista de Información y Acción
(CEFEMINA, Feminist Information and Action Center), this campaign
demands urgent international solidarity and support.
Deborah Meacham
Latin American and Caribbean Women's
Health Network
Jan. 16, 2009
Mexico
La ropa provoca, dice clero a mujeres
Autoridades
eclesiásticas responsabilizaron a las mujeres de ser culpables de
las agresiones sexuales que sufren, debido a la ropa “provocativa”
que visten
Clothing Provokes Violence, Clergy Tells Women
[Translation by Kristin Bricker]
Ecclesiastical
authorities say women are to blame for the sexual aggressions they
suffer, due to the "provocative" clothing they wear.
Note by author Kristin
Bricker's:
The Catholic Church held
its Sixth World Meeting of the Families in Mexico City this month.
The World Meeting of the
Families was founded by Pope John Paul II. Mexican President Felipe
Calderon gave the surprise keynote address at the beginning of the
conference.
Ecclesiastical authorities blame women
for the sexual aggressions they suffer due to the "provocative"
clothing they wear.
With plunging necklines and mini-skirts, "they're provoking men,"
said the archbishop of Santo Domingo, Nicolas de Jesus Lopez
Rodrigez during the Sixth World Meeting of the Families.
Women expose themselves to rape, to
being used, to being treated like an old dishrag, because they
devalue themselves and their dignity, said the auxiliary bishop of
Tegucigalpa, Darwin Rudy Andino.
Likewise, laypersons who attended the
meeting said that women are the ones responsible for physical as
well as verbal attacks. They should dress modestly and not arouse
kinkiness in other people.
"It's their fault that they attack
them," added Ecuadorian Alexandra Marcillo.
Renato Ascencio, the bishop of Ciudad
Juarez said: women should not only change the way they dress, but
also their behavior. Modesty has been lost in the Mexican family...
The World Meeting of the Families'
official website recommends that women don't use provocative
clothing, that they watch how they look and gesture at other people,
and that they don't allow "hot jokes."
Additional notes from
Kristin Bricker:
*Ciudad Juarez is
internationally considered to be the femicide capital of Mexico.
While accurate estimates of how many women have been murdered in
Juarez are unavailable, what is most striking is how the dead women
are found. They are often raped and sexually mutilated beyond
recognition.
Bishop Renato Ascencio's
statement leads one to believe that he thinks women's lack of
modesty causes men to kidnap them, rape them, bite off their nipples
and mutilate them in other ways, murder them, and hide their bodies
for months before dumping multiple bodies killed in the same manner
in a field in his city.
Is women's lack of
modesty also to blame for the fact that these murders almost always
go unpunished, and that Mexican police rarely carry out rigorous
investigations?
Autoridades eclesiásticas
responsabilizaron a la mujer de ser culpables de las agresiones
sexuales que sufren, debido a la ropa “provocativa” que visten.
Con escotes pronunciados y minifaldas
“está provocando al hombre”, dijo el arzobispo de Santo Domingo,
Nicolás de Jesús López Rodríguez, durante el sexto Encuentro Mundial
de las Familias.
Las mujeres se exponen a violaciones, a
que las usen, que las traten como un trapo viejo, porque desvaloran
su persona y su dignidad, dijo por su parte el obispo auxiliar de
Tegucigalpa, Darwin Rudy Andino...
Natalia Gomez Quintero and Noemi
Gutierrez
El Universal - Mexico City
Jan. 16, 2009
Translated by Kristin Bricker
Jan. 17, 2009
See also:
La Iglesia culpa a escotes y minis de violaciones, ¿estás
de acuerdo?
El foro de El Universal sobre el tema
(El Universal newspaper's Internet forum about this story - in Spanish)
and...
Barrio Terrazas: dejó atrás el feminicidio y es embajador en Canadá
Las víctimas ocasionaron su muerte, decía el ex gobernador
Mexico's Congress has confirmed Francisco Javier
Barrio Terrazas, of the National Action Party (PAN), as ambassador
to Canada. Barrio Terrazas once declared that the murders of women
in Ciudad Juarez, in Chihuahua state - of which there are over 400
to date - were "natural" because the victims were walking in dark
places and had dressed provocatively in miniskirts.
Full English Translation
México DF, 16 enero 09 (CIMAC).- México ratificó como embajador ante el Gobierno
de Canadá al hombre que afirmó que los asesinatos de mujeres en Ciudad Juárez,
Chihuahua --más de 400 hasta hoy-- era una situación “natural”, en virtud de que
las víctimas caminaban por sitios oscuros y “se vestían de manera provocativa”
con minifaldas: Francisco Javier Barrio Terrazas, del Partido Acción Nacional
(PAN)...
Gladis Torres Ruiz
CIMAC Noticias
Jan. 18, 2009
About the PAN
The National Action Party (Partido Acción Nacional), known by the acronym PAN,
is a conservative and Christian Democratic party and one of the three main
political parties in Mexico...
In some cases, PAN mayors and governors have banned public employees from
wearing miniskirts (in Guadalajara)... and once, in Baja California, brought
religious and political pressure to bear on a
teenaged rape victim to dissuade her from the
abortion to which she was legally entitled. Carlos Abascal, secretary of the
interior in the latter part of the [Vicente] Fox administration, called birth
control pills weapons of mass destruction in 2005. Such stances are not,
however, shared by many of the PAN's middle-class rank and file members...
For the presidential election in 2006,
Felipe Calderón, a former party president, was
selected as the PAN candidate for the office of president, beating his
opponents...
From: NationMaster.com
Mexico
Juarez Femicides Lawyer Murdered
All lawyers involved in
the defense of two Juarez bus drivers falsely accused of femicide
have been executed; state police [had] shot one in the head [in
2002]
Two unidentified gunmen executed Mario
Escobedo Salazar and his son Edgar Escobedo Anaya, also a lawyer, in
their Juarez office on Tuesday, January 6 [2009].
The double homicide comes nearly seven
years after Chihuahua State Judicial Police killed Escobedo
Salazar's other son, Mario Escobedo Anaya, during a chase. The
police originally stated that Mario Escobedo Anaya died when his
vehicle crashed during the chase. It was later revealed that he died
of a gunshot wound to the head fired by state police.
Prior to Mario Escobedo Anaya's 2002
execution, he, his father, and a third lawyer, the late Sergio Dante
Almaraz Mora, represented the two Juarez public transportation bus
drivers accused of murdering eight women whose bodies were found
dumped in an area of Juarez known as "the Cotton Field." Escobedo
Salazar's recent execution means that the entire defense team is now
dead; all were executed. One of the bus drivers also died under
suspicious circumstances while in police custody...
Kristin Bricker
My Word is My Weapon
Jan. 10, 2009
Added: Jan. 30, 2009
Mexico
 |
|
Lydia Cacho with her new book
“Not With My Child” Photo:
Deborah Bonello / Los Angeles Times |
Lydia Cacho publishes manual for parents on detecting child abuse
Lydia Cacho’s celebrity was apparent from the get-go last Thursday night in the
trendy Condesa neighborhood of Mexico City, where the journalist launched her
new book “Not With My Child” (Con Mi Hij@ No).
...Her latest book [is] a manual for parents in Mexico to help them recognize if
their children are being abused and, if so, what they can do about it...
The sexual abuse of minors is a topic she has specialized in, and Cacho has been
the victim of harassment due to her investigations into the issue.
She was a relatively unknown journalist until she published a book in 2006 that
alleged the existence of a child sex ring in the southern state of Cancun, after
which she was illegally arrested and harassed by some of the powerful men she
implicated in “Los Demonios del Eden.”
She catapulted to fame when she challenged her aggressors by going public and
filing a legal action against them — although it was ultimately unsuccessful.
Since then, Cacho has become something of a symbol for the issue of the
repression of journalists and freedom of expression in Mexico. Her last book,
“Memories of a Disgrace (Memorias de una Infamia)” detailed the events that
unfolded after the publication of “Los Demonios del Eden.”
Speaking to a packed auditorium on Thursday, Cacho said that after “Los Demonios
del Eden” was published, she was inundated by more than 3,000 e-mails from
people who were worried their children were being abused, or who knew their
children had been abused and didn’t know what to do about it. That prompted her
to write “Not With My Child,” which she says is an effort to answer the
questions she received from her anxious public...
“Not With My Child” includes chapters on the history of pedophilia and the
sexual abuse of children, as well as how to negotiate Mexico’s ineffective
justice system. Cacho says that building strong social networks is one of the
most important means of detecting and putting a stop to child abuse in Mexico...
Deborah Bonello
Mexico Reporter
Jan. 26, 2009
United States
The Right Priority Now
National Association to Protect Children
advocates for including anti-exploitation project funding in President Obama's
economic stimulus legislation
$50 MILLION in new funding for anti-child exploitation teams has been included
in the Senate economic stimulus bill, thanks to Sen. Barbara Mikulski of
Maryland.
PROTECT has worked with Sen. Mikulski on child exploitation and child rescue
issues since 2007. She's a tough pro-child, anti-crime champion for children.
Next, the full Senate will vote on the bill. Then House and Senate will hammer
out differences between their two stimulus bills... the final hurdle for getting
stimulus funding for child rescue.
Quick Overview: The heart of President Obama's Economic Recovery Plan is getting
federal dollars to "shovel-ready" projects to generate jobs and economic
activity. The President says these projects should be important for America and
subject to full accountability. The single best way to do that, right now, is to
gear up the national effort to combat child exploitation. This can be done by
directing economic stimulus funds for the Justice Department (BJA, COPS and
OJJDP) to state and local law enforcement for anti-child exploitation work...
Also from the Protect.org...
Last year [2008], law enforcement identified over 300,000
suspects distributing sadistic movies and photographs of very young children
being sexually abused, raped and tortured. The demand for these foul crime scene
recordings can only be supplied one way: through the abuse of more and more
children.
But the explosion of child pornography trafficking has not only
caused a modern-day human rights crisis, it has also given law enforcement
powerful new tools to find and stop child predators. Hundreds of thousands of
criminals are now hiding in plain sight, and 1 out of 3 arrests for child
pornography uncovers evidence of local child sexual abuse victims. Investigators
can follow the trail of child pornography trafficking "back through the
Internet," directly to the door of these criminals. That means that for the
first time ever, we have the power to stop and prevent child sexual abuse on a
massive scale.
...The shocking truth is that while we could rescue thousands of
children tomorrow, less than 2% of these known suspects are even being
investigated due to lack of resources. In 2008, PROTECT won a major victory with
the passage of the PROTECT Our Children Act, but thousands of children will not
be rescued until the bill is fully-funded.
National Association to Protect Children
Jan. 20, 2009
|
United States
Big Increase In Child Pornography Cases Leads To Backlog At FBI's Forensic
Laboratories
The FBI's stepped-up effort to fight Internet child pornography has led to an
evidence backlog in the bureau's computer labs, auditors said Friday.
The Justice Department's inspector general said the number of such cases handled
by the FBI rose more than 20-fold between the 1996 and 2007 budget years. As a
result, the heavy volume meant it took an average of about two months to examine
such evidence in 2007 _ and even as long as nine months.
The FBI, which has built a new lab in Maryland to handle the increased demand,
agreed with the inspector general's recommendations to create deadlines to
reduce the backlog.
In a written response to the report, the FBI's executive assistant director,
Stephen Tidwell, said the bureau should try to hire more staff to handle the
growing number of people needed to process digital evidence, not just in child
exploitation cases but in other types of criminal investigations...
The Associated Press
Jan. 30, 2009
Washington, DC, USA
Pornografía de menores de edad atasca laboratorios del FBI. Número de casos se
multiplicó por 20
Washington, DC - El aumento de los casos de pornografía infantil en Internet ha
provocado un atasco en los laboratorios informáticos de la Oficina Federal de
Investigaciones (FBI), según una auditoría del Departamento de Justicia
publicada hoy. Recursos insuficientes
El informe señala que el número de casos tramitados por el FBI entre 1996 y 2007
se multiplicó por veinte, por lo que recomienda que se marque objetivos para
acabar los trabajos y tratar así de desbloquear los laboratorios de
investigación.. Es tal el aumento que el pasado año el FBI construyó otro
laboratorio informático para poder gestionar esta demanda, pero no ha sido
suficiente. El FBI señaló en un comunicado que está de acuerdo con las
recomendaciones del inspector general del Departamento de Justicia, Glenn A.
Fine, para crear los plazos para reducir el retraso.
En un comunicado, el subdirector ejecutivo del FBI, Stephen Tidwell, señaló que
la oficina tratará de contratar más personal para atender estos casos. Según
explicó, cada vez se necesitan lunes, enero 26, 2009
Univisión and EFE
Jan. 26, 2009
|
Native United States
Sex offender registries raises sovereignty issues
Washington, DC - Two laws authorizing national sex offender registries were
highlighted during the year [2008].
The Violence Against Women Act, would establish a national tribal sex offender
registry, as well as a related tribal registry of civil and criminal orders of
protection issued by tribes and proximate jurisdictions.
The Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety Act is not Native-specific and does
not authorize a tribal orders-of-protection registry. AWA mandates the creation
of tribal sex offender registries, but it does so on terms that empower the U.S.
attorney general to revoke the jurisdiction of tribes that cannot or will not
comply with the difficult, expensive and uncertain details of its
implementation.
But because of the threatened transfer of tribal registration duties to states
if Native governments do not meet federal government deadlines, and despite
being left out during the law’s crafting and enactment, almost 200 tribes had
agreed to establish their own AWA registries by mid-year.
At a meeting of National Congress of American Indian’s National Task Force to
End Sexual and Domestic Violence Against Women, NCAI’s associate counsel
Virginia Davis described the AWA as a “quagmire.”
“Unfortunately, the Adam Walsh Act basically tells about half the tribes in the
country that if they don’t comply with these really onerous mandates that are in
the law – that, again, don’t really make sense for tribal communities – if the
tribes fail to comply with those, then all of the tribe’s authority to track and
register and manage sex offenders on tribal lands will be given to the state,”
Davis said. “So it raises some serious sovereignty concerns and we’re continuing
to really struggle with the Adam Walsh Act. So the Adam Walsh Act is becoming a
quagmire, a real challenge for Indian country that I think we’re going to keep
talking about for the next couple of years...”
Gale Courey Toensing
Indian Country Today
Dec. 31, 2008
Colombia
 |
|
Raúl Quiroga Ariza |
Por delitos de pornografía infantil y acto sexual abusivo es encarcelado hombre
en el Meta
Man
is jailed for acts of child sexual abuse and child pornography
Meta - Raúl Quiroga Ariza, aged 48, was arrested while he was in possession of a
cell phone with nearly 30 pornographic pictures of minors. In court proceedings
Quiroga Ariza pleaded guilty.
"Using guile and ingenuity, Quiroga Ariza photographed the girls nude through
various means," said police commander Colonel Pablo Emilio Suarez Gomez.
Colonel Gomez Suarez stated that Quiroga Ariza obtained photographs of the
victims by first earning the confidence of mothers with limited economic
resources. He then gained easy access their daughters, who were girls between 8
and 12 years of age.
Despite threatening to murder the victim's parents if they told of the abuse,
two girls did tell their parents, who immediately called police.
Colonel
Gómez Suárez made a public call for parents to report cases of sexual abuse of
their sons and daughters, and to take precautions against strangers who approach
their children.
Raúl Quiroga Ariza, de 48 años de edad, fue capturado mientras tenía en su poder
un teléfono celular con cerca de 30 fotografías pornográficas de menores de
edad. El delincuente admitió ante un juez de control de garantías los cargos que
le fueron imputados por la Fiscalía. "Valiéndose de artimañas y de la ingenuidad
de las niñas, las manoseaba y fotografiaba de distintas maneras, con sus cuerpos
desnudos", afirmó el coronel, Pablo Emilio Gómez Suárez, comandante de la
Policía Meta.
Para obtener las fotografías de las menores, Quiroga Ariza primero se ganaba la
confianza de las madres, de escasos recursos económicos, para así acceder sin
dificultades a las hijas, niñas entre los 8 y 12 años, precisó el coronel Gómez
Suárez.
A pesar de que a las pequeñas las mantenía en silencio bajo amenazas de que si
denunciaban o le contaban a alguien lo que les estaba haciendo, mataba a sus
mamás, 2 de las niñas decidieron contarle a sus papás lo que ocurría, quienes de
inmediato denunciaron los hechos.El coronel Gómez Suárez hizo un llamado para
que los padres denuncien los casos de abuso sexual de sus hijos e hijas, y tomen
precauciones frente a las personas extrañas que se acercan a sus hijos. jueves,
enero 29, 2009
El Tiempo
Jan. 26, 2009
Mexico
|

Congressional Deputy
Violeta del Pilar Lagunes Viveros
|
Puebla, décimo lugar en pederastia
La propuesta de la legisladora panista incluye la no prescripción del delito.
Puebla state holds tenth place in child sexual
abuse
Congresswomen proposes reforms in state criminal laws
Federal
congress-woman from Puebla state
Violeta Lagunes, of the National Action Party (PAN), has urged the Puebla
state legislature to reform its penal Code of Social Protection to include acts
of sexual abuse against children as aggravating circumstances in cases where
religious ministers and priests, or school teachers are involved.
Yesterday, Deputy Lagunes, who is the chair of the Special Committee for Policy
and Administration of Justice Linked in Relation to Femicide of Congress,
submitted a letter to the General Secretariat of the Congress of Puebla, urging
them to use their moral and social authority to modify state laws in regard to
the sexual abuse of children.
Lagunes' proposal is extremely avant-garde, inasmuch as her proposal, in-line
with laws in the United States, would open a legal window to allow adults who
suffered childhood sexual abuse to seek prosecution of the perpetrators.
Deputy Lagunes: "Based on [our] research, we realized the shortcomings in
criminal law in the states, including the state of Puebla...
The letter presented by Deputy Lagunes states: "Puebla is among the 10 states
with the highest rates of pedophilia in the country, and that there have been
very serious cases in which ministers of religious denominations who have been
active subjects in sex crimes, such as the case of Father Nicolas Aguilar
Rivera, who is accused of having sexually abused about sixty children.
"In the same vein, according to reports from the Secretariat of Public Education
in the state of Puebla, during the year 2008, 11 teachers were prosecuted for
committing sex crimes against minors in their care. These cases demonstrate the
need for strong laws that establish penalties covering both scenarios."
Presenta ante el Congreso local una serie de propuestas para reformar el Código
de Defensa Social para que se incluya la agravante al delito de abuso sexual
infantil cuando se perpetre por algún ministro de culto o docente
Con el escandaloso caso del cura pederasta Nicolás Aguilar Rivera y las 11
denuncias de abuso sexual infantil en contra de profesores, Puebla ocupa el
décimo lugar a nivel nacional en pederastia, por lo que la diputada federal
Violeta Lagunes urgió al Congreso local
modificar el Código de Defensa Social para que se incluya como agravante del
delito cuando se perpetre por algún ministro de culto, sacerdote o docente.
Ayer, la diputada panista y presidenta Comisión Especial para Conocer las
Políticas y la Procuración de Justicia Vinculada a los Feminicidios del Congreso
de la Unión presentó ante la Secretaría General del Congreso local un escrito
para que la LVII Legislatura modifique su ley para sancionar a las personas que
abusen sexualmente de menores, valiéndose de su calidad moral o social.
Selene Ríos Andraca
La Quinta Columna
Jan. 29, 2009
Mexico
Enhanced role expected for U.S. in drug cartel battle
Mexico Bureau chief chief Alfredo Corchado is currently a Nieman fellow at
Harvard University.
Alarmed by spiraling drug violence along their shared border, U.S. and Mexican
officials say they foresee an enhanced U.S. role in the battle against powerful
cartels, including joint operations that could involve private American
contractors or U.S. military and intelligence personnel.
The U.S. and Mexican officials say their cooperation could go beyond the current
practice of "sharing intelligence." They say that historical concerns about
Mexican sovereignty may be overcome by the challenge in restoring stability to
key regions, particularly along the border...
"Mexico is not a narco state, but we're witnessing a giant criminal apparatus
operated by drug traffickers," said Arturo Yañez, an author and security expert
at the Autonomous University in the state of Mexico. "If Mexico is not a failed
state, it sure is acting like one..."
Howard Campbell, a border anthropologist and drug expert at the University of
Texas at El Paso...
"I really characterize this as a civil war, even if it's not formally declared,"
Campbell said. "We're seeing all the casualties of a war, people murdered,
people wounded, people fleeing their homes, social disintegration and chaos...
"This is more like Afghanistan than Colombia, with regional, powerful chieftains
who operate with complete authority, oftentimes through graft and corruption."
Alfredo Corchado
Dallas Morning News
Jan. 28, 2009
LibertadLatina
Note:
The lawless conditions across Mexico's northern and southern border
zones provide cover to drug cartels and other organized sex
trafficking organizations who systematically target the poor...
migrants, indigenous and rural women and girls especially, for mass
rape, kidnapping and enslavement in prostitution in Mexico, across
the United States and in Japan and Europe.
We call upon the administration of U.S. President Barak Obama to
structure its multi-hundred-million dollar support for the Calderon
government to ensure that they are required to end the corruption
and impunity that fuels these criminal mafias and their mass sexual
victimization of women and children.
It is just as likely that some of the $400 million dollar U.S.
funded
Merida Initiative aid package to
fight drug cartels will end up in the hands of those cartels
themselves, as not, given the corruption in the region.
In the meantime, women and girls, and all innocent members of
Mexican society and those who cross Mexico as migrants from South
and Central America (and Asia), are sitting ducks for waves of
violent sexual predators who victimize tens of thousands of women
and girls while the world sits on the sidelines and does,
effectively, nothing.
The victims, and those at risk of exploitation, enslavement and death await
our serious and effective efforts to protect and rescue them!
End impunity now!
Chuck Goolsby
LibertadLatina
Jan. 28, 2009
Mexico
Leticia Valdez Martell
Lydia Cacho
Puebla y Oaxaca, historia de un país productor de pornografía infantil
Desde el poder político y judicial, los pedófilos se fortalecen
Puebla and Oaxaca states, the history of a
child pornography producing nation
Pedophiles are protected by the heads of political and judicial
power
Lydia Cacho - [This] is the story of the
nation of Mexico as a producer of child pornography, where the
kidnapping of children is, in many cases, linked to sexual
exploitation. It is the story of a nation where, from the seats of
political and judicial power, pedophiles are strengthened, a nation
where such men unite and celebrate their power.
Three months ago, the mother of a victim of a child
pornography network sought me out. Her daughter was abused at the age of 5 by a
crime network that was run by [millionaire businessmen] Succar Kuri and Kamel
Nacif.
Their criminal enterprise was protected by [Puebla state
governor] Mario Marin and Emilio Gamboa, among others...
Succar Kuri [now on trial] has... insisted that the daughter
return to court to retell her story for the umpteenth time.
The girl, now age fifteen, speaks of committing suicide if
she is forced to go to [the trial court in] the prison of La Palma
to confront her abuser once again, and if another judge dares to ask
her to narrate, again, her memories of childhood terror...
The victim’s mother is even less motivated to return to court
given that the Supreme Court of the Nation made a ruling that
effectively protected the child sex trafficking network of Kamel
Nacif and Governor Mario Marín.
The Court’s decision [in the Lydia Cacho case] shielded the
network of pedophiles and politicians, who protect each other's
shared personal and business interests and who engage in political
money laundering.
Like the families in the Succar Kuri case, Leticia Valdez
brings to court the videos of her young son’s abuse, and carries
photographs and medical evaluations that describe the damage caused
to her baby by pedophiles. And she talks and talks, seeking that her
country believe her…
Leticia Valdez… demands that the guilty pay for the crimes
that are clearly visible in the videos: acts of the rape of young
children carried out in a school.
While Valdez Martell dares to tell the truth,
Oaxaca state governor Ulises Ruiz Ortiz gives orders
intended to silence any discussion of the case. According to a court
secretary in Oaxaca, there are clear orders from the governor for
the case to be prolonged, so as not to allow the further
accumulation of evidence to take place….
But Valdez Martell is not alone. She has already benefited
from the fact that the Attorney General of Oaxaca has provided her
with twelve files of similar cases involving the same suspects. In
addition, the names of state police agents from Veracruz and Oaxaca,
as well as PRI [Institutional Revolutionary Party] officials, and,
according to sources, a PRD [Party of the Democratic Revolution]
member, also appear.
None of these 12 cases has ever been follow-up on…
Meanwhile, the media evades getting to the root of the
problem.
Why have the mothers and fathers of the other
children who were raped and used to produce child pornography by the
same clan [at the San Felipe Institute] remained silent?
Why did
Mexican Attorney General Eduardo Medina Mora
insist during a news interview with tv talking head
Carlos Loret de Mola, that human
rights violations reported by Amnesty International are [just]
individual cases?
Why have special prosecutors denied the
existence of pornography networks despite the fact that journalists
and the victims themselves have, time and again, demonstrated that
they do exist?
These networks of criminal impunity are not created in
silence, but in view of the entire country. They are woven together
beginning at the seats of power.
Pedophilia, Before the Supreme Court
Why did the Valdez case reach the Supreme Court?
…The case reached the Supreme Court because Ulises Ruiz, the
constitutional governor of Oaxaca, indirectly protects the network
of pedophiles that is involved in the case.
The case never came to court [in Oaxaca state] because one of
the lawyers for the [accused] pedophiles and their accomplices is
Jorge Franco Jimenez, who is the father of Jorge Franco Vargas, the
current president of the PRI political party in Oaxaca…
The state government of Oaxaca will [act to save their
friends]. Meanwhile the production of “home” child pornography, as
one INTERPOL agent has called it, continues to grow under the
protection of those in power.
Mexico’s Attorney General will find arguments to make this case,
like millions before it, into one of “individual acts” of human
rights violations, while ignoring the role of the use of state power
in the defense of criminals.
We know that the federal government of Mexico rejects the defense of
human rights, and they spit in the face of [president of the
National Human Rights Commission]
Jose Luis Soberanes, the Ombudsman who dreams of
presenting the Supreme Court with cases that the victim's [lawyers]
have prepared well...
The attacks against Leticia Valdez and her family will not
remain hidden. Society is watching Governor Ulises Ruiz and the
child pornography networks that he protects. One thing is clear:
Neither Leticia nor her family are alone. Millions of Mexican men
and women are on her side.
Full English Translation
Hace tres meses, me buscó la madre de una de las niñas que fuera utilizada, a
los 5 años, para fabricar pornografía infantil por la red de Succar Kuri,
protegido de Kamel Nacif, de Mario Marín y Emilio Gamboa, entre otros.
Con la mirada inundada de desesperanza, con la voz cansada, con la ira colgada
de su pecho, me dijo que luego de casi cuatro años de abogados, de juicios, de
amenazas de muerte, Succar otra vez quiere que su hija vaya a verlo y declare
por enésima vez.
Y la niña, ahora de quince años, habla de quitarse la vida si la fuerzan a ir al
penal de La Palma a ver a su abusador; si otro juez se atreve a pedirle que
narre sus recuerdos de terror infantil. Y la madre dice que si tiene que matar a
alguien, pues mata, pero a su hija no la vuelven a llevar a un juzgado.
Lydia Cacho
Appearing in CIMAC Noticias
Jan. 21, 2009
See also:
Lydia Cacho Starts Foundation
In October, 2008 Lydia Cacho formed
the Lydia Cacho Foundation, based in Madrid, Spain.
Please donate!
FundacionLydiaCacho.org
Video excerpt from the 2007 film
Demons of Eden,
that documents
the campaign of retaliation against Lydia Cacho.
This film clip includes a short statement by a girl who was
trapped by the Jean Succar Kuri / Kamel Nacif child sex
trafficking network, and includes video of Kamel Nacif
confronting Lydia Cacho during legal proceedings. Also
included is a audio conversation recorded between Kamel
Nacif and Puebla governor Mario Marin, during which Nacif
admits that he took revenge (with Governor Marin's help)
against Lydia Cacho for exposing what Nacif states were his
"parties with children."
Despite this extensive audio evidence, the Supreme Court
(which can investigate cases of high-level state
corruption), denied that any violation of Lydia Cacho's
basic rights took place (and thus shielding the child sex
trafficking network from scrutiny).
(See the below listed video for the Mexican public's
reaction to this decision by the Court.)
(In Spanish)
TVCiudania (Citizen TV)
Presented on YouTube
Dec. 3, 2007
Video documentation
Leticia Valdez Martell speaks out at
rally for Lydia Cacho
Leticia Valdez Martell speaks at large rally
in front of Mexico's Supreme Court to protest the Court's
decision to reject a Court investigation of Puebla governor
Mario Marin and accused pedophile millionaire Kamel Nacif,
plotters in the kidnapping and torture of activist
journalist Lydia Cacho in revenge for publishing her exposé
against pedophile networks in Cancun: Demons of Eden.
(In Spanish)
TVCiudania (Citizen
TV)
Presented on YouTube
Dec. 3, 2007
Rogelio Mora-Tagle entrevista a la
periodista mexicana Lydia Cacho
Extensive TV news report on the the Lydia
Cacho case with Rogelio Mora-Tagle, including an interview
with Lydia Cacho in which she explains her arrest and
torture, the involvement of corrupt politicians and the
impunity that provides protection to accused child sex
traffickers in Mexico.
(In Spanish)
TVCiudania (Citizen
TV)
Presented on YouTube
Nov. 27, 2007
Lydia
Cacho interview after receiving the 2007 CNN Hero of
the World award.
(In
English)
|
CNN
Presented on YouTube
Dec. 3, 2007
|
Mexico
Mexico On Path To Becoming Bigger Security Threat Than Iraq
...The prospect that America's southern neighbor could melt into lawlessness
provides an unexpected challenge to Barack Obama's new government. In its latest
report anticipating possible global security risks, the U.S. Joint Forces
Command lumps Mexico and Pakistan together as being at risk of a "rapid and
sudden collapse."
"The Mexican possibility may seem less likely, but the government, its
politicians, police and judicial infrastructure are all under sustained assault
and pressure by criminal gangs and drug cartels," the command said in the report
published Nov. 25...
Retiring CIA chief Michael Hayden told reporters on Friday that that Mexico
could rank alongside Iran as a challenge for Obama _ perhaps a greater problem
than Iraq.
The U.S. Justice Department said last month that Mexican gangs are the "biggest
organized crime threat to the United States." National security adviser Stephen
Hadley said last week that the worsening violence threatens Mexico's very
democracy...
The grim assessments from north of the border got wide play in the Mexican media
but came as no surprise to people here. Many said the solution lies in getting
the U.S. to give more help and let in more migrant workers who might otherwise
turn to the drug trade to make a living.
Otherwise the drug wars will spill ever more heavily into America, said Manuel
Infante, an architect. "There is a wave of barbarity that is heading toward the
U.S.," he said. "We are an uncomfortable neighbor."
The Huffington Post
Jan. 18, 2009
Mexico
Threat of Violence on the Mexican Border Could Draw Federal Troops ...
Mexico City -
Escalating drug violence in Mexico and a fear that it may soon spill over into
the United States has resulted in a comprehensive defense plan that could see an
unprecedented military presence along the southern border.
...Concentrated around busy drug routes, especially the town of Ciudad de Juarez
just across the border from El Paso, Texas, the violence has resulted from a
struggle to control the lucrative narcotics trade into the United States,
representing the “greatest organized crime threat to the United States,"
according to a 2009 threat assessment prepared by the U.S. Department of
Justice.
Although the Department of Homeland Security kept exact details of the plan
under wraps, the Associated Press reported that it would likely include “federal
homeland security agents helping local authorities and maybe even military
assistance from the Department of Defense, possibly including aircraft, armored
vehicles and special teams to go to areas overwhelmed with violence.”
The Huffington Post
Jan. 12, 2009
Mexico, United States
Mexico's Instability Is a Real Problem
Don't discount the possibility of a failed state next door.
Mexico is now in the midst of a vicious drug war. Police officers are being
bribed and, especially near the United States border, gunned down. Kidnappings
and extortion are common place. And, most alarming of all, a new Pentagon study
concludes that Mexico is at risk of becoming a failed state. Defense planners
liken the situation to that of Pakistan, where wholesale collapse of civil
government is possible.
One center of the violence is Tijuana, where last year more than 600 people were
killed in drug violence. Many were shot with assault rifles in the streets and
left there to die. Some were killed in dance clubs in front of witnesses too
scared to talk.
It may only be a matter of time before the drug war spills across the border and
into the U.S. To meet that threat, Michael Chertoff, the outgoing secretary for
Homeland Security, recently announced that the U.S. has a plan to "surge"
civilian and possibly military law-enforcement personnel to the border should
that be necessary.
The problem is that in Mexico's latest eruption of violence, it's difficult to
tell the good guys from the bad. Mexico's antidrug czar, Noe Ramirez Mandujano
was recently charged with accepting $450,000 from drug lords he was supposed to
be hunting down. This was the second time in recent years that one of Mexico's
antidrug chiefs was arrested for taking possible payoffs from drug kingpins.
Suspicions that police chiefs, mayors and members of the military are also on
the take are rampant.
In the past, the way Mexico dealt with corruption was with eyes wide shut.
Everyone knew a large number of government officials were taking bribes, but no
one did anything about it. Transparency commissioners were set up, but given no
teeth.
And Mexico's drug traffickers used the lax law enforcement their bribes bought
them to grow into highly organized gangs. Once organized, they have been able to
fill a vacuum in underworld power created by Colombian President Álvaro Uribe's
successful crackdown on his country's drug cartels...
Joel Kurtzman
Wall Street Journal
Jan. 16, 2009
LibertadLatina
Commentary
The drug cartels that are waging war against the Mexican
state also control large segments of the highly profitable sex
trafficking business that kidnaps, rapes and enslaves thousands of
women and girls each year.
We encourage the incoming Obama administration to take note of this fact, and
not allow the human rights tragedy facing women and girls in Mexico to go
without a strong and effective international response.
In this drug war, sexual exploitation and slavery targeting Mexico's most
vulnerable people (children, migrants, the indigenous and other poor women) has
been pushed not just to the back burner of public and political attention, but
the subject has been pushed off the burner altogether.
Yet the sex traffickers and the drug cartels are often one in the same.
The lawless vacuum that exists across Mexico
today gives free reign to those who actively engage in the mass rape,
kidnapping, enslavement and murder of women and underage girls to fuel their
prostitution empires around the world.
Enough is enough!
Only the voices of we the people, directed
to our politicians, will raise awareness of this human rights crisis to a level
where the United States, Mexico and international institutions will have to take
action.
The victims, and those at risk of exploitation, enslavement and death await
our serious and effective efforts to protect and rescue them!
End impunity now!
Chuck Goolsby
LibertadLatina
Jan. 16/19, 2009
|
Added: Jan. 19, 2009
Washington, DC, USA
More than 1,200 alleged incidents of human trafficking reported in the U.S.
Washington - In the first 21 months of operation, the Human Trafficking
Reporting System (HTRS) recorded information on more than 1,200 alleged
incidents of human trafficking, the U.S. Department of Justice’s Bureau of
Justice Statistics (BJS) announced today. The HTRS contains data collected by 38
federally funded human trafficking task forces on alleged incidents of human
trafficking that occurred between January 1, 2007, and September 30, 2008.
The Trafficking Victims Protection Act of 2000 (TVPA), and its reauthorizations
in 2003, 2005, and 2008 define a human trafficking victim as a person induced to
perform labor or a commercial sex act through force, fraud, or coercion. Any
person under age 18 who performs a commercial sex act is considered a victim of
human trafficking, regardless of whether force, fraud, or coercion was present.
Most (83 percent) of the reported human trafficking incidents involved
allegations of sex trafficking. Labor trafficking accounted for 12 percent of
incidents, and other or unknown forms of human trafficking made up the remaining
five percent. About a third (32 percent) of the 1,229 alleged human trafficking
incidents involved sex trafficking of children...
Hispanic victims comprised the largest share (37 percent) of alleged sex
trafficking victims and more than half (56 percent) of alleged labor trafficking
victims. Asians made up 10 percent of alleged sex trafficking victims, compared
to 31 percent of labor trafficking victims...
Bureau of Justice Statistics
Jan. 15, 2009
Arkansas, USA
Lack of translators for sex offender program
Bentonville - The state Correction Department says it does not have enough
translators to accommodate non-English speakers if they are ordered into a
treatment program for sex offenders.
The issue came to light after Circuit Judge David Clinger included the year-long
treatment program as part of the sentences for two sex offenders. The department
wrote Clinger, asking him to drop the requirement for the two convicts and to
not make participation in the program a requirement if the defendant does not
speak English.
Correction Department spokeswoman Dina Tyler said two men Clinger sentenced have
holds through Immigration and Customs Enforcement and will likely be deported
immediately upon release, Tyler said.
The department says about 360 of its inmates are Hispanic. Tyler says most speak
at least some English.
"This non-English speaking population is new for us. Most of our population of
this nature is coming from Benton County," Tyler said.
The Associated Press
Jan. 14, 2009
Mexico
Barrio Terrazas: dejó atrás el feminicidio y es embajador en Canadá
Las víctimas ocasionaron su muerte, decía el ex gobernador
Mexico Congress has
confirmed Francisco Javier Barrio Terrazas, of the
National Action Party (PAN), as ambassador to
Canada. Barrio Terrazas once declared that the
murders of women in Ciudad Juarez, in Chihuahua
state - of which there are over 400 to date - were
"natural" because the victims were walking in dark
places and had dressed provocatively in miniskirts.
Barrio Terrazas was the Mayor of Ciudad Juarez in the 1980s, and became
Chihuahua state's governor in 1992.
This week, the plenary session of the Standing Committee of Congress approved
Barrio Terrazas as Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of Mexico to
Canada.
On January 7th, 2009 President Felipe Calderón nominated Barrio Terrazas for
Senate confirmation. Barrio Terrazas did not solve the femicide Ciudad Juarez
and Chihuahua. He refused to create a special prosecutor's office the cases, and
had received a recommendation from the National Human Rights Commission that he
be censured for impunity and neglect in investigating the murders.
Only the Democratic Revolution Party (PRD) questioned the presidential
appointment and abstained in the vote. Gerardo Villanueva of the Aztec Sun Party
added his concerns that Barrio Terrazas had "done little or nothing in the fight
against corruption in Mexico."
Pleas fall on deaf ears
During Barrio Terrazas' time as governor of Chihuahua, a coalition of community
organizations called the Pro-Women Coordination called for the creation of a
special prosecutor's office to investigate the crimes of women.
In 1997 Barrio Terrazas said that "special prosecutors have never been useful
for anything." During the same year the national Congress set up a Special
Commission to come to Ciudad Juárez to verify status of investigations.
Barrio Terrazas ended 1997 still refusing to create the special prosecutor's
office. In January 1998, one month after Barrio Terrazas met with the visiting
federal commission, he finally agreed to create a special prosecutor's office,
and appointed Maria Antonieta Esparza as its head.
Also during 1998, the National Human Rights Commission (CNDH) addressed the case
of femicide in the region and issued recommendations that highlighted the
existence of impunity, and noted deficiencies in the investigations. For the
first time in its history, the CNDH declared that sexism had impeded the
investigation.
Shortly before the CNDH report was published, then ex-governor Barrio Terrazas
stated that the rate of crimes against women in the region were within the
"normal" range.
As CIMAC Noticias has documented, Barrio Terrazas has always minimized the
importance of femicide, much as did former PRI (Institutional Revolutionary
party) governor (from 1998 2004) Patricio Martinez, who said that the women who
were murdered had caused their own deaths.
Today femicide remains an unresolved issue in Chihuahua state, to such a degree
that on January 7, 2009, the same day that Calderon nominated Barrio Terrazas,
the organizations Justice for Our Daughters and the Center for Human Rights for
Women submitted to the Standing Committee of the Congress of Chihuahua state a
petition to activate a Alert Gender, a law enforcement state of emergency that
is stipulated in the state's Law Giving Women the Right to a Life Free of
Violence.
The request is a reaction to the ongoing femicide. Far from being a settled
issue, acts of femicide murder claimed two lives in the first week of 2009,
according to Luz Estela Castro, coordinator of the Center for Human Rights for
Women. Since November 25, 2008, the Day of Non-violence Against Women, to date,
media have reported the malicious killings of 20 women. Fifty percent of those
cases involved domestic violence.
As Lucha Castro says, "the femicide today has a history, which is one of neglect
and apathy in the case of the missing victims." And part of that story involves
the failure to act by officials, including former governor Barrio Terrazas, who
dismissed the cries of help for the victims. So, stated the mothers of the
victims, "we talk of negligence and complicity."
México DF, 16 enero 09 (CIMAC).- México ratificó como embajador ante el Gobierno
de Canadá al hombre que afirmó que los asesinatos de mujeres en Ciudad Juárez,
Chihuahua --más de 400 hasta hoy-- era una situación “natural”, en virtud de que
las víctimas caminaban por sitios oscuros y “se vestían de manera provocativa”
con minifaldas: Francisco Javier Barrio Terrazas, del Partido Acción Nacional
(PAN).
Esta semana, el Pleno de la Comisión Permanente aprobó el dictamen por el que se
ratificó como Embajador Extraordinario y Plenipotenciario de México en Canadá a
quien fuera también Presidente Municipal de Ciudad Juárez y Gobernador de
Chihuahua, en 1983 y 1992, respectivamente.
Fue Felipe Calderón quien el 7 de enero de 2009 le propuso al Senado de la
República que Barrio Terrazas --cuya gestión de gobierno no solucionó el
feminicidio en su entidad, se negó a crear una Fiscalía especial y recibió una
recomendación de la Comisión Nacional de los Derechos Humanos (CNDH) por
impunidad y negligencia en las investigaciones de los asesinatos-- fuera
distinguido como embajador de México en Canadá.
Gladis Torres Ruiz
CIMAC Noticias
Jan. 18, 2009
Mexico
4º extrañamiento a Calderón: no publica Reglamento de Ley de Trata
Ha incurrido en una omisión grave: PRI
Mexico's Congress warns
President Calderon for the forth time for his
failure to publish rules to enable the 2007
Anti-Trafficking Law
Mexico City - The PRI (Partido Revolucionario Institucional) caucus in the
Standing Committee of the Congress had reached an agreement to release its forth
Letter of Concern [warning] to President Felipe Calderón in response to the
President's failure to publish rules that will allow the 2007 Law to Prevent and
Punish Trafficking in Persons to be put into force.
The first call made to insist that President Calderón publish the regulations
that implement the law was announced on July 8, 2008. The second request was
made on September 10, 2008 and the third on December 4 2008. All three previous
requests went unanswered by the President.
During its regular session on January 13 this year, senators from the PRI stated
that Calderon has engaged in a serious omission by not issuing the regulations,
because "in the fight against crime the state must follow-through with its
responsibilities [hold up its end of the bargain]."
Senator Raul Gonzalez Mejia asked the President to report to Congress on the
status of progress in forming the Inter-Ministerial Commission which the Act
calls-for in its Article 12.
The Act states that the federal government should establish an Inter-Ministerial
Commission, under Article 21 of the Organic Law of Federal Public
Administration, to coordinate their actions to develop and implement the
National Program to Prevent and Punish Trafficking in Persons.
The Commission shall be composed of agencies of the Federal Public
Administration and the Attorney General's Office, and should include the
Calderon government's policies on the prevention and punishment of trafficking
in persons, as well as guidelines for the protection and care of victims...
Under the law, federal Interior Ministry and the Ministry of Public Security
must both sign agreements with the the states and the federal district in regard
to the law.
The law establishes that a person shall be in violation of the crime of human
trafficking when they encourage, order, offer, facilitate, transport, hand-over
or receive, for themselves or for another person, a person. A person who,
through physical or moral violence, deception or abuse of power, causes a victim
to be subjected to sexual exploitation, forced labor or services, slavery,
practices similar to slavery, servitude or the removal of an organ, is guilty of
the crime of human trafficking.
When a convicted person is declared criminally responsible for the crime of
trafficking, the judge must order that person to pay reparations to the
victim(s), including the costs of medical treatment, rehabilitation, physical
therapy, occupational therapy, transportation, and food and housing.
La bancada del Partido Revolucionario Institucional (PRI) en la Comisión
Permanente del Congreso presentó un punto de acuerdo para emitirle un cuarto
extrañamiento y primero de este año a Felipe Calderón por no expedir el
reglamento de la Ley para Prevenir y Sancionar la Trata de Personas (Ley de
Trata) publicada en el Diario Oficial de la Federación el 27 de noviembre de
2007.
Este es el cuarto exhorto que se le realiza a Felipe Calderón respecto la
publicación del Reglamento de la Ley de trata, el primero fue hecho el 8 de
julio de 2008, el segundo el 10 de septiembre de 2008 y el último el 4 de
diciembre de 2008, los tres quedaron sin respuesta.
Durante la sesión ordinaria del 13 de enero de este año, las y los senadores del
PRI afirmaron que Calderón ha incurrido en una omisión grave, al no expedir
dicho Reglamento, pues “en la lucha contra el crimen el Estado tiene que cumplir
con la parte que le corresponde.
Gladis Torres Ruiz
CIMAC Noticias
Jan. 16, 2009
Mexico, United States
Mexico's Instability Is a Real Problem
Don't discount the possibility of a failed state next door.
Mexico is now in the midst of a vicious drug war. Police officers are being
bribed and, especially near the United States border, gunned down. Kidnappings
and extortion are common place. And, most alarming of all, a new Pentagon study
concludes that Mexico is at risk of becoming a failed state. Defense planners
liken the situation to that of Pakistan, where wholesale collapse of civil
government is possible.
One center of the violence is Tijuana, where last year more than 600 people were
killed in drug violence. Many were shot with assault rifles in the streets and
left there to die. Some were killed in dance clubs in front of witnesses too
scared to talk.
It may only be a matter of time before the drug war spills across the border and
into the U.S. To meet that threat, Michael Chertoff, the outgoing secretary for
Homeland Security, recently announced that the U.S. has a plan to "surge"
civilian and possibly military law-enforcement personnel to the border should
that be necessary.
The problem is that in Mexico's latest eruption of violence, it's difficult to
tell the good guys from the bad. Mexico's antidrug czar, Noe Ramirez Mandujano
was recently charged with accepting $450,000 from drug lords he was supposed to
be hunting down. This was the second time in recent years that one of Mexico's
antidrug chiefs was arrested for taking possible payoffs from drug kingpins.
Suspicions that police chiefs, mayors and members of the military are also on
the take are rampant.
In the past, the way Mexico dealt with corruption was with eyes wide shut.
Everyone knew a large number of government officials were taking bribes, but no
one did anything about it. Transparency commissioners were set up, but given no
teeth.
And Mexico's drug traffickers used the lax law enforcement their bribes bought
them to grow into highly organized gangs. Once organized, they have been able to
fill a vacuum in underworld power created by Colombian President Álvaro Uribe's
successful crackdown on his country's drug cartels...
Joel Kurtzman
Wall Street Journal
Jan. 16, 2009
LibertadLatina
Note:
The drug cartels that are waging war against the Mexican
state also control large segments of the highly profitable sex
trafficking business that kidnaps, rapes and enslaves thousands of
women and girls each year.
We encourage the incoming Obama administration to take note of this fact, and
not allow the human rights tragedy facing women and girls in Mexico to go
without a strong and effective international response.
In this drug war, sexual exploitation and slavery targeting Mexico's most
vulnerable people (children, migrants, the indigenous and other poor women) has
been pushed not just to the back burner of public and political attention, but
the subject has been pushed off the burner altogether.
Only the voices of we the people, directed
to our politicians, will raise awareness to a level were the United States,
Mexico and international institutions will have to act.
The victims, and those at risk of exploitation, enslavement and death await
our serious and effective efforts to protect and rescue them!
End impunity now!
Chuck Goolsby
LibertadLatina
Jan. 16, 2009
California, USA
Arrestan a hombre que habría "vendido" a su hija
Tanto el padre como el joven fueron detenidos por violar las leyes de California
sobre tráfico humano y violación de un menor
Un hombre de 36 años, de nombre hispano, fue detenido en una zona rural de
California por haber pactado casar a su hija de 14 años a cambio de dinero,
alcohol y comida, informó el martes una fuente policial.
Según la policía de Greenfield, una región agrícola a 225 km al sudeste de San
Francisco, Marcelino de Jesús Martínez acordó con un joven de 18 años que
contrajera matrimonio con su hija adolescente a cambio de 16.000 dólares, 100
cajas de cerveza y comida.
El hecho fue descubierto por las autoridades luego de que el padre acudiera a la
policía a quejarse por no haber recibido el pago del acuerdo, mientras la hija
de 14 años había sido obligada a mudarse con su "marido".
Tanto el padre como el joven fueron detenidos por violar las leyes de California
sobre tráfico humano y violación de un menor.
www.laprensahn.com
Jan. 15, 2009
Added: Jan. 14, 2009
California, USA
Police: Man sold teen daughter into marriage for cash, beer, meat
Such arrangements are normal in Mexican state where family is from, police say
Greenfield - A California man sold his 14-year-old daughter to an 18-year-old
man for cash, beer and meat -- then called police when the prospective
bridegroom didn't live up to his end of the deal, authorities said Tuesday.
Marcelino de Jesus Martinez, 36, of Greenfield, California, was arrested Monday
and booked into the Monterey County Jail, Greenfield police said in a statement.
He faces felony charges of receiving money for causing a person to cohabitate,
police said.
All those involved in the case are from the western Mexican state of Oaxaca, the
police chief said. In the Oaxacan community, such an agreement is "normal and
honorable," he said. "In California, it's against the law..."
"The 14-year-old juvenile moved in with Galindo and when payments were not
received, the father, Martinez, called Greenfield PD to bring back the
daughter," according to a written police statement...
The Greenfield area has had a large influx of Oaxacans. A presentation on
understanding Oaxacan culture is posted on the Greenfield police Web site.
"Arranged marriages are common in several cultures, and this is not an issue
among consenting adults over the age of 18," police said in the statement. "But
California has several laws regarding minors, the age of consent and human
trafficking."
Police are trying to be culturally sensitive, Grebmeier told CNN, but "when I'm
in Mexico, I have to respect Mexican laws. When you're in the United States, you
have to respect United States laws. That's the bottom line."
Ashley Broughton
CNN
Added: Jan. 13, 2009
California, USA
Dad Sells Girl, Calls Cops to Complain He Wasn't Paid
One hundred cases of beer was only part of what a California man wanted in
exchange for his daughter.
Greenfield - Greenfield, Calif., police said Marcelino de Jesus Martinez, 36,
tried to arrange for his 14-year-old daughter to marry Margarito de Jesus
Galindo, 18, for $16,000 and 100 cases of beer, along with several cases of meat
and other items.
After the girl moved in with Galindo, Martinez called police to complain that he
hadn't been paid. Police said he asked for their help getting his daughter
back...
Galindo, the intended buyer/groom, was booked on suspicion of statutory rape,
police said.
Police said the practice of arranged marriage in some cultures is not relevant
in the case, and even if it were, California law doesn't go for it when one or
both parties have been coerced.
NBC4 Los Angeles
Jan. 13, 2009
LibertadLatina
Commentary
Within
the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca and its regional neighbors Chiapas
and Guerrero, many indigenous cultures engage in the tradition of arranged
marriage. Typically this practice starts at age 11 for girls. This
involves an exchange of food and goods that are given to the girl's parents (a
sort of dowry).
Child marriage is also common across Latin America.
These 'traditions' have caused a clash with the cultural values and laws of the
United States, which is the destination of tens of thousands of people who
practice these beliefs.
Unfortunately, human traffickers long-ago figured out how to exploit these
traditions for their profit.
Members of trafficking gangs 'marry' young, underage girls in southern Mexico
[and in neighboring Guatemala], in exchange for a few boxes of fruit and cases
of beer, and then they sell these girls into forced prostitution both locally
and internationally via organized sex trafficking networks.
Tens of thousands of these girl victims are enslaved in brothels, in places like
Tapachula, a child prostitution mega-center on the Mexico-Guatemala
border, in the child prostitution mege-centers of Tijuana and Acapulco (which
cater largely to thousands of male sex tourists from the U.S.), in the San Diego
County, California child rape camps (where a large Oaxacan population also
lives), and in Europe and Japan.
The nation of Mexico does nothing of substance to protect these victims. Within
the United States, the problem is off-the-radar-screen for many in law
enforcement.
Mexico's indigenous population has been looked-upon as free source of labor and
sexual exploitation for centuries. With billions of dollars of drug cartel money
in their pockets, sex trafficking networks today
(including Colombian and Mexican drug cartels, the Japanese Yakuza, the maras
(youth gangs) and the Russian Mob - are taking that condoned 'tradition'
of exploitation to a whole new commercial level as the World, including the
United States, stands-by and does nothing.
That must change!
Meanwhile, on Mexico's southern border with Guatemala, organized criminal
culture (made up of these same mafias, cartels and gangs, as well as thousands
of corrupt police, immigration agents and soldiers)...
systematically rape 450 to 600 migrant women and underage
girls each day, with no police response whatsoever,
along migration routes traveled daily by thousands of people.
And that is just the statistic in the southern border region.
Women and girls in the region, and especially along the "Milky Way" (the local
name for the entire south-to-north migration route across Mexico to the U.S.
border, where sex traffickers systematically kidnap and enslave women), and
especially women and girls in Mexico's many indigenous communities, are at risk.
Today, as poverty in the region increases dramatically, they are not protected
by anyone from this mass for-profit anti-female crime wave and
gender-hostile living environment.
Urgent action is needed to protect victims and those who are at risk!
We look forward to the active interest and participation of the new U.S.
presidential administration of Barak Obama, and incoming Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton, in regard to forming, finally, a truly organized response to
these crimes against humanity, that does not blatantly ignore the real needs of
Latin Americas poor, Afro-descendent and indigenous victims.
Stop this madness!
U.S. political pressure on Mexico's government and its human trafficking cartels
will not happen unless and until we the people
add our voices of outrage to the political process.
Its time to act ... today, not tomorrow!
End impunity now!
Chuck Goolsby
LibertadLatina
Jan. 14/15, 2009
See also:
En Japón, de 3 a 4 mil niñas mexicanas víctimas de ESCI
Afirma la experta Teresa Ulloa
Three to four thousand underage indigenous girls from the
poor states of Oaxaca, Chiapas, Guerrero and Mexico [state] have become victims
of commercial sexual exploitation of children (CSEC) in Japan.
Puebla city, in Puebla state - Teresa Ulloa,
Latin America and Caribbean Director of the Coalition Against Trafficking of
Women (CATW) announced her estimates of the numbers of indigenous children sex
trafficked to Japan, and explained that traffickers trick the victims using
offers of thousands of dollars for their parents in exchange for
[obtaining permission] to take their daughters. The parents are told that their
girls are going to the United States to work in fast food restaurant jobs.
The city of Tapachula, near
Mexico's border with Guatemala,
is one of the largest and most lawless child sex
trafficking markets in all of Latin America.
A 2007 study by...
ECPAT
[End Child Prostitution and Trafficking]...
revealed that over 21,000 Central Americans, mostly
children, are prostituted in 1,552 bars and brothels
in Tapachula.
Undercover Reporter in Spain Poses as Buyer, is Offered Six 13 Year Old 'Virgin' Mayan Girls Kidnapped from Chiapas, Mexico, Mexican Trafficker's Price: $25,000 Each.
(In Spanish)
Chiapas State Investigates Sale of Young Mayan Girls in Europe.
(In Spanish)
The Girls Next
Door
The New York Times'
ground-breaking story on child and youth sex trafficking
from Mexico into the United States
LibertadLatina
|
Mexico
Al salir, viajar por México hacia EU y regresar a casa
Migración de centroamericanas, el fenómeno de la violencia
Central American women face violence during
migration
Comitán [in southern Mexico] - Central American women migrants leave their
countries of origin and then travel through Mexico on their way to the United
States. During their travels they experience many forms of gender
violence.
That violence does not end when they return to their homes. Upon returning, they
are stigmatized for having left their towns, and they are looked upon as being
'easy' women by local men.
This situation is worse for returning women migrants, mainly from Honduras, El
Salvador and Guatemala, who have been victims of sex and labor trafficking. They
return to their homes without money, and are seen as having failed. By contrast,
men who return home are viewed with dignity.
Men in their local communities believe that if these women were sexually
exploited outside of the country, they too have a right to do so.
It is important to note that indigenous Central American women are up to four
times more vulnerable to these forms of violence, because of their gender,
ethnicity and condition as undocumented migrants.
These issues were addressed during the Second Binational Workshop on Gender and
Intercultural Identity, which was conducted in Comitan, in Chiapas state. Rubí
Escamilla from the International Organization for Migration (IOM) spoke at the
event.
Escamilla is a member of the IOM team in the city of Tapachula, Chiapas [an
epicenter of child sex trafficking near the Guatemalan border], where she
provides inter-agency assistance to women who are victims of sex and labor
trafficking, as well as those who have faced sexual violence during their
migration across Mexico to the United States.
During the meeting, which was convened by the Latin American Association of
Organizations for the Promotion of Development (ALOP), Ruby Escamilla explained
that six to
eight out of every ten Central American women - some 30 to
40 percent of 1,500 migrants who cross Mexico's southern border daily, suffer
some form of sexual violence
[that amounts to 450 to 600 new victims of rape
with impunity each day].
Women migrants also face robbery, physical assault, extortion and abduction by
criminal groups and by elements of federal and state police forces and the
Mexican Army.
Escamilla reported that women migrants leave their homes due to poor [local]
economies and insecurity [vulnerability to organized crime].
Luís Flores, project officer for the IOM in Tapachula, noted that during the two
and a half years that their project has spent working on the southern Mexican
border, they have identified at least 150 cases of sex and labor trafficking.
Some 40 to 50 victims have been assisted. Some victims have refused help.
Central American migrant women are also stigmatized in Mexico. Honduran
migrants, for example, are refused domestic work, unlike other Central American
women, because they are considered to be husband stealers (roba maridos).
This situation forces them to work in bars to earn enough money to continue
their journey to the United States. In Tapachula, roughly 90 percent of Honduran
migrant women are sex workers, which makes them vulnerable to human traffickers.
Despite the existence of Mexico's human trafficking law, and the fact that the
Attorney General's Special Prosecutor for Violent Crimes Against Women and
Trafficking (FEVIMTRA) exists, few if any of the 331 human rights complaints
filed by migrants in 2007 have succeeded.
Despite having been created by Congress to address gender violence issues,
FEVIMTRA has yet to formulate policies and receive funding that will allow it to
operate.
Las migrantes centroamericanas durante el tránsito de sus países hacia México
rumbo a Estados Unidos viven distintos tipos de violencia, que no terminan
cuando regresan a sus lugares de origen, pues al volver son estigmatizadas por
haber salido de sus pueblos, consideradas “fáciles, sin valor”, por los hombres
de sus comunidades.
Esta situación se agudiza cuando las mujeres migrantes, provenientes
principalmente de Honduras, El Salvador y Guatemala, son víctimas de trata de
personas con fines de explotación sexual y laboral, pues regresan sin dinero a
sus casas, “fracasadas”; caso contrario al de los varones que al volver “se
dignifican”.
Cabe mencionar, que las migrantes centroamericanas indígenas son todavía más
vulnerables, hasta cuatro veces por su condición de género, migrante, sin
documentos y su origen étnico.
Guadalupe Cruz Jaimes
CIMAC Noticias
Dec. 23, 2008
See also:
The city of Tapachula, near
Mexico's border with Guatemala,
is one of the largest and most lawless child sex
trafficking markets in all of Latin America.
A 2007 study by...
ECPAT
[End Child Prostitution and Trafficking]...
revealed that over 21,000 Central Americans, mostly
children, are prostituted in 1,552 bars and brothels
in Tapachula.
|
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|
|
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|
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LibertadLatina
News /
Noticias
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Updated: Oct.
08, 2010
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Últimas Noticias
Latest News
Mexico
Insiste México en negar justicia a víctimas de
violación en Atenco
Pide a la CIDH
que no admita 11 casos de 26 mujeres violadas
México, DF - El gobierno mexicano pidió a la
Comisión Interamericana de Derechos Humanos
(CIDH), que no admita el caso de 11 de las 26
mujeres, que fueron víctimas de violación
sexual, durante los operativos del 3 y 4 de mayo
de 2006 en Texcoco y San Salvador Atenco, porque
las instancias nacionales "aún lo están
investigando".
Además insistió en que las peticionarias han
tenido diversas vías y recursos legales para
acceder a la justicia. Con esta respuesta, el
Estado mexicano no reconoce los hechos ocurridos
hace cuatro años y tampoco acepta su
responsabilidad en ellos, dijo en conferencia de
prensa, Jaqueline Sáenz, abogada del Centro de
Derechos Humanos Miguel Agustín Pro Juárez
(Centro Prodh), asociación que lleva estros
casos ante el sistema interamericano.
Aunque en febrero de 2009, la Suprema Corte de
Justicia de la Nación (SCJN), reconoció que en
los operativos de 2006, se cometieron graves
violaciones a derechos humanos; y pese a que el
30 de junio de este año, este mismo tribunal
ordenó la liberación de 12 presos políticos que
participaron en esos hechos, el Estado mexicano
sigue negando la justicia para 11 mujeres
violadas sexualmente...
Mexico insists upon
denying justice to the victims of rape at Atenco
Mexico City - The government of Mexico has asked
the Inter-American Human Rights Commission
(IAHRC) to reject consideration of the case of
11 women [from among a total of 26 women
victims] who were raped or otherwise sexually
assaulted by police officers during a law
enforcement operation carried out on May 3rd and
4th of 2006 in the adjoining cities of Texcoco
and San Salvador de Atenco, in the state of
Mexico. The federal government of Mexico cites
the fact that it is still investigating the case
[4 years after the events occurred] as the
justification for requesting that the IAHRC deny
the petition by the victims and their attorneys.
In addition, Mexican officials insisted that the
petitioners have had access to a range of legal
avenues within Mexico.
According to Jaqueline Sáenz, a lawyer with the
Miguel Agustín Pro Juárez Human Rights Center
(ProDH), which represents the victims, the
government of Mexico has, through its response
to the IAHRC, refused to acknowledge or accept
any responsibility for the events that occurred
four years ago in Atenco.
Mexico takes this position despite the fact that
the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation
(SCJN) has recognized that grave human rights
violations that occurred during the 2006 police
operation, and has acted to free 12 political
prisoners who participated in protest activities
at the event. Nonetheless, Mexico's federal
government continues to deny justice for the 11
women sexual assault victims who were willing to
seek justice in this case.
Following public protests resulting from a local
government ban on allowing flower vendors to
work on city streets, a confrontation erupted
between protesters and a combined force of
federal and state police. The conflict resulted
in 211 protesters being detained. Some 47 of
those arrested were women. Twenty six women were
raped or sexually abused by police officers. Of
that group, 13 filed formal complaints, and 11
victims were willing to proceed with the case
that is now being considered by the IAHRC.
Sáenz stated that, after seeing that the federal
investigation into victim's legal complaints was
not progressing, the 11 victims of sexual
torture, accompanied by lawyers from ProDH and
the International Center for Justice and the
Rule of Law (CEJIL), decided to petition the
IAHRC on April 29, 2008.
The IAHRC forwarded the petition to the
government of Mexico, and allowed for a two
month response period. Mexico did not respond
within the time limit, and requested an
extension. They finally submitted their response
on July 23, 2010.
Mexico's response to the petition, which was
received by the ProDH Center on September 1,
2010, stated that the investigation into the
Atenco case was still open. In addition, the
response completely absolved the five policemen
who were accused of abuse of authority, despite
the fact that the victim's petition before the
IAHRC accuses the five men of torture.
Sáenz noted that, consistent with their response
to the IAHRC, Mexico denies that any human
rights violations occurred at Atenco in their
discussions with international organizations.
Since July of 2009, when the federal Special
Prosecutor's Office for Violent Crimes Against
Women and Human Trafficking (FEVIMTRA), declined
to investigate the case, referring it instead to
the Attorney General of Mexico State [were
Texcoco and Atenco are located], no follow-up
action has been taken by authorities, because
the preliminary investigation file was quite
large, and it is still being revised.
Mexico's response to the IAHRC petition by the
victims included a list upcoming investigatory
activities that the Mexico State prosecutors
will carry out. The list includes a plan to
solicit interviews with the victims, despite the
fact that the victims have been adequately
interviewed in the past. State prosecutors also
plan to evaluate the case in the context of the
Istanbul Protocol on Torture [to evaluate
whether the case meets the Istanbul standard for
torture], despite the fact that this process ahs
already been completed, and the results indicate
that the case does meet the Istanbul criteria
for defining acts of torture.
On October 1, 2010, Sáenz declared, the ProDH
Center and CEJIL submitted a document to the
IAHRC in which they provide their observations
in regard to Mexico's response to the Atenco
case petition. They state, among other things,
that although they have not exhausted all legal
avenues available within Mexico, it is also true
that Mexico is not conducting a serious and
impartial investigation, and that therefore, the
Atenco petition should be admitted before the
IAHRC.
In response to this series of events, Bárbara
Italia Méndez, one of the victims and a
petitioner in the case, observed that the
Mexican government response to the petition was
a slap in the face to the victims. In addition,
she said, the response shows the lack of justice
involved, given that the five accused assailants
were absolved of any wrongdoing.
Italia Méndez added that she will continue
participating in the case, although she knows
that the road will be a long one, thanks to the
fact that "the responsible authorities continue
to lie," and especially the governor of Mexico
State, who had ordered the police crackdown on
protesters, and who, after the assaults took
place, declared that he would repeat his actions
if he had to do it again.
For the victims of sexual torture, the most
recent ray of hope has been the Inter-American
Court of Human Rights decision in favor of
indigenous women Valentina Rosendo Cantú and
Inés Fernández Ortega, who were raped by Mexican
Army soldiers [in 2002]. That decision, she
said, puts the issue of sexual violence against
women back on the table.
Anayeli García
Martínez
CIMAC Women's
news agency
Oct. 07, 2010
See also:
Added:
May 16, 2009
Mexico
Mujeres de Atenco, tortura
sexual e impunidad
México DF - El Estado mexicano violó sus
garantías individuales. Fueron agredidas con
golpes en todo el cuerpo, despojadas de su ropa,
violentadas sexualmente, mordidas, pellizcadas…
les cubrieron el rostro, les introdujeron dedos
y objetos anal y vaginalmente, las violaron, las
humillaron, las insultaron, las amenazaron de
muerte y finalmente se les negó la asistencia
ginecológica para que no pudieran demostrar la
tortura sexual…
Women of Atenco - sexual
torture and impunity
...Of the 20 accused policemen, none has been
sent to prison. Only officer Doroteo Blas
Marcelo, a rapist, was convicted for "libidinous
acts."
His victim,
Ana Maria Rodriguez
Velasco, was forced to perform oral sex. She was
able to recognize her torturer because when he
finished, he yanked her by the hair, looked in
her face, and said: “Now swallow it, bitch!”
Judge Tomás Santana Malvaez sentenced officer Blas Marcelo to pay a fine
of only 1,877 Mexican pesos (US $142 dollars).
The judge pardoned Blas Marcelo from paying
reparations to the victim...
Full English Translation
Sanjuana Martínez
CIMAC Noticias
News for Women
Mexico City
May 12, 2009
See also:
LibertadLatina
Mexican Police
Rape and Assault
47
Women at Street Protest in the city of San
Salvador Atenco
Mexico
|
 |
|
Teresa
Ulloa, director of the Coalition
Against Trafficking in Women and
Girls for Latin America and the
Caribbean |
DF,
a la cabeza en lucha contra trata de personas:
Teresa Ulloa
El Distrito Federal va a la cabeza en la lucha
contra la trata de personas en el país, pues ha
dado pasos importantes como los últimos rescates
de mujeres y niñas de hoteles donde eran
explotadas sexualmente, reconoció Teresa Ulloa.
La directora regional de la Coalición Contra el
Tráfico de Mujeres y Niñas para América Latina y
el Caribe (CATWLAC, por sus siglas en inglés)
afirmó en entrevista que la ciudad de México
también cuenta con un plan que integra políticas
públicas en la materia.
La activista, nominada al Premio de Derechos
Humanos de las Naciones Unidas 2005 y al Premio
de Derechos Humanos del gobierno de Suiza,
indicó que en los últimos tres años la capital
del país ha mostrado un esfuerzo y se ha
preocupado más por atacar la trata de
personas...
Mexico City's government
leads the way in Mexico's fight against human
trafficking
According to Teresa Ulloa, director of the
Coalition Against Trafficking in Women and Girls
for Latin America and the Caribbean, the local
government of Mexico City has taken the
initiative to become the nation's leader in
taking action to combat modern human slavery. In
recent months, city police and prosecutors have
raided a number of hotels that were fronts for
sex trafficking rings that exploited women and
girls.
During an interview Ulloa said that Mexico City
has also developed an integrated plan of action
to address the problem of trafficking. She added
that during the past three years, the city's
leaders have shown that they are willing to
aggressively confront traffickers. City
prosecutors have committed to bringing
trafficking cases to court. However, [the
attitudes of] judges continue to be a major
obstacle to their success.
Ulloa added that Mexico City is a major transit
and distribution center for trafficked women and
girls. Sex tourism exists, but is completely
clandestine. Sexual services are sold in
'packages' on the Internet.
The trafficking law that was passed by the
Legislative Assembly of the Federal District
[Mexico City] has flaws, and is not consistent
with international protocols against human
trafficking, especially in the area of criminal
prosecution, said Ulloa. It is seen as being of
limited effectiveness because of these flaws.
Ulloa declared that both Mexico City and Mexico
as a whole have yet to come to understand that
human trafficking involves a multi-faceted set
of crimes that express themselves in diverse
ways.
Ulloa noted that human trafficking networks in
Mexico are moving fast to adapt to change, and
are always one step ahead of society's attempts
to implement policies and actions to combat
them.
The Mexico City government has made tremendous
efforts to fight trafficking, said Ulloa, but
they have been hampered in their efforts at
prosecution by inadequate laws. Nonetheless,
city prosecutors has won four convictions
against trafficking defendants, while the
federal government has achieved only one
conviction at the national level.
Mexico City's trafficking law "is not very good,
it requires modification, but in general it has
allowed authorities to rescue women and girls,
and it is being enforced by officials who are
motivated to combat trafficking" said Ulloa.
Ulloa stated that, at the federal level, a need
exists to establish effective, integrated
strategies in regard to prevention, victim
assistance and the prosecution of traffickers.
She warned that Mexico is just one step away
from becoming a child sex trafficking center at
the level of Thailand.
Ulloa concluded by observing that sex
trafficking in Mexico has now displaced
narcotrafficking in profitability for criminal
organizations, and is fighting for first place
with illicit arms trafficking. At the same time,
she emphasized, poverty and impunity have become
the best allies of traffickers in women and
girls.
Cronica
Oct. 03, 2010
Mexico
|
 |
|
Mexico
City Attorney General Miguel Ángel
Mancera |
Detalla PGJDF acciones para combatir la trata de
personas
El procurador general de justicia capitalino,
Miguel Ángel Mancera, detalló frente a sus
homólogos de la zona Centro del país las
acciones emprendidas en la Ciudad de México
contra el delito de trata de personas.
Durante la Segunda Sesión 2010 de la Conferencia
de Procuradores Generales de Justicia de la Zona
Centro, Mancera Espinosa señaló que el Gobierno
del Distrito Federal ha impulsado una serie de
acciones de prevención y persecución para
erradicar este delito.
En una sesión de trabajo de esta reunión
celebrada el pasado viernes en la ciudad de
Puebla, el abogado de la ciudad reconoció que
pese a los esfuerzos para erradicar ese acto
ilícito, el crimen organizado usa otros medios
delincuenciales para eludir la acción de la
justicia.
Para contrarrestar las artimañas de los
delincuentes, el gobierno capitalino tiene como
prioridad establecer políticas públicas en la
materia que permitan desactivar y desalentar las
conductas delictivas de los individuos...
Mexico City prosecutors
details actions to fight human trafficking
During a recent presentation before fellow local
prosecutors at the Second Conference of Attorney
Generals of the Central Zone of Mexico, Mexico
City Attorney General Miguel Ángel Mancera
presented his city's actions to fight human
trafficking.
Mancera detailed to his colleagues how Mexico
City has initiated a series of efforts to
address prevention and prosecution of
trafficking crimes. He admitted that going after
trafficking networks was difficult work, given
that organized crime changes its modus operandi
to evade detention and prosecution.
To counteract the evasive actions of
traffickers, Mexico City considers its number
one priority to be the implementation of public
policies that will allow prosecutors to
disable and discourage the criminal behavior of
individuals.
Mancera
noted that, among the actions taken by Mexico
City was the implementation in October of 2008
of the Law to Prevent and Eradicate Human
Trafficking, Sexual Abuse and the Commercial
Sexual Exploitation of Children.
Mancera added that the city created a
specialized agency to address human trafficking
crimes, and developed both a telephone hotline
and a web page to assist in crime prevention and
the reporting of cases by the public.
Currently, the Mexico City Attorney General's
Office is in the process of formalizing a
relationship with the Special Prosecutors Office
for Crimes of Violence Against Women and
Children, which is a division of the federal
Attorney General of the Republic...
The conference was attended by the attorney
generals of Hidalgo, Morelos, Tlaxcala, Puebla
states, as well as by officials from Baja
California, Sur, Baja California, Guerrero and
Oaxaca.
Cronica
Oct. 03, 2010
North Carolina,
USA
Human trafficking alleged in Durham
Durham - A grand jury has indicted Ivan
Cervantes Damian on charges he held a
15-year-old girl captive for more than 18 months
and forced her to have sex.
Damian, 30, faces charges of first-degree
statutory sex offense, human trafficking and
forcing a child into sexual servitude.
Authorities accuse Damian of having sex with the
teenage girl between December 2008 and August
2009. They also accuse him of holding the victim
in servitude from December 2008 to July 2010.
"He alienated her from society," said Durham
Police Cpl. Marty Walkowe.
Walkowe said the relationship began as a
voluntary one while the couple was still living
in Mexico. When they immigrated a couple of
years ago, Walkowe said, Damian violated North
Carolina's human trafficking law by bringing a
minor from another nation into the state.
"Even though his girlfriend left voluntarily,
because she was a minor, it's human
trafficking," Walkowe said. "It sounds like a
big organized thing, but it was actually just
her voluntarily coming from Mexico with him to
here."
Walkowe said the victim reported Damian to
police after their relationship soured and she
wanted to leave.
Damian is being held at the Durham County
Detention Center on $250,000 bail. The federal
Immigration and Customs
Jesse James
Deconto
News Observer
Oct. 06, 2010
California, USA
|
 |
|
Gregorio
Gonzalez |
Alert Driver Saves Kidnapped Girl
Fresno - An 8-year-old girl who was abducted by
a stranger while playing outside a Fresno home
escaped from her captor Tuesday morning after a
driver recognized the suspect's vehicle and cut
it off, police said.
The child was found in Fresno about 11 hours
after she disappeared around 8:30 p.m. Monday,
triggering a statewide Amber Alert. Police
arrested Gregorio Gonzalez, 24, who they said
was a member of the Bulldogs street gang.
Fresno Police Chief Jerry Dyer said the driver
recognized the red pickup truck from media
reports that showed surveillance video of the
kidnapper's vehicle.
When the driver saw a girl's head in the window,
he cut the truck off and forced it to stop, Dyer
said. The suspect pushed the girl out of the
car, and she ran to safety, he said.
The girl was taken to a hospital in good
condition, but Dyer later confirmed she had been
sexually assaulted. The police chief described
her as "frightened, traumatized." ...
"I was at the same time happy and grateful that
my daughter had been brought home," the girl's
mother told a news conference. "During the
night, the hours seemed very long."
Police said quick action by Fresno resident
Victor Perez helped the girl escape...
The Associated
Press
Olivia Mu
Oct. 05, 2010
Guatemala, Mexico
Another Wall Blocks Route to U.S.
Guatemala City - Travelling without documents to
the United States from Latin America can turn
into an odyssey, in which migrants have to elude
common criminals and drug traffickers along the
way, not to mention the laws on migration. But
now another obstacle is emerging: a wall between
Guatemala and Mexico.
According to the head of customs for Mexico's
tax administration, Raúl Díaz, in order to stop
boats carrying contraband, the southern Mexican
state of Chiapas is building a wall along the
border river Suchiate, similar to the one the
United States is building along its southern
border with Mexico.
"It could also prevent the free passage of
illegal immigrants," admitted the Mexican
official.
Smugglers use the Suchiate River to move
products across an international border without
paying duty taxes, but at the same time,
thousands of Central and South Americans cross
the river in their attempts to reach the United
States in search of opportunity -- and without
the required documents.
Some 500,000 migrants cross Mexican territory
without permission each year, according to
Mexico's National Commission on Human Rights
(CNDH).
The intention to build a border wall has
triggered a wave of opposition from civil
society and government organizations, with
charges that it is a "senseless" measure that
will not succeed in preventing undocumented
migrants from crossing the border on their way
north...
The cruelty to which undocumented migrants are
often subjected was laid bare Aug. 23, when 72
people coming from Guatemala, as well as El
Salvador, Honduras, Ecuador and Brazil, were
brutally murdered in San Fernando, a town in the
eastern Mexican state of Tamaulipas. They were
presumably killed by the Los Zetas drug cartel,
which is also involved in kidnapping and
exploiting migrants.
In addition, a total of 9,758 kidnappings of
migrants were reported in Mexico from September
2008 to February 2009, according to the CNDH.
Putting up a wall on the Guatemala-Mexico border
"is going to make the migrants' situation worse,
because to meet their needs they are always
going to find blind points where there are no
migration or security controls, which implies
greater risks," said Maldonado...
Danilo Valladares
Inter Press
Service (IPS)
Sep. 15 , 2010
California, USA
Police search for man in California girl's
abduction
Authorities early Tuesday were searching for a
man they said snatched an 8-year-old girl from a
central California neighborhood and took off
with her in his pickup.
Police said the mother was close by and got into
a car and frantically tried to chase down the
truck but was not able to catch up with the
man...
[The girl] was last seen wearing bluejeans and a
purple sweater with "Winnie the Pooh" on the
front, Fresno police said.
Police said the suspect, described as a
6-foot-tall, thin man with slicked-back hair,
drove to the Fresno neighborhood in an older
reddish-brown Ford truck. The man drove up to
six children about 8:30 p.m. Monday.
The man spoke in Spanish and told the children
that he would take them to the Dollar Store and
buy them toys if they got into his car, CNN
affiliate KFSN-TV in Fresno reported.
The man then pulled the victim into his car and
sped away, authorities said.
Police told the TV station they had received
reports earlier of a man with a similar
description and vehicle exposing himself to
young girls blocks away from where the abduction
happened.
Fresno police said 100 officers were searching
for the girl and the suspect, KFSN reported.
Scott Thompson
CNN
Oct. 05, 2010
Mexico
|
 |
|
Inés Fernández and
Valentina Rosendo |
Comunicado: Las sentencias de la CoIDH
permitirán a Inés y Valentina acceder a la
justicia negada en México.
Press Release:
Inter-American Court of Human RIghts Decision
Allows Inés and Valentina Access to Justice in
Mexico
• Valentina Rosendo Cantú narró lo que el fallo
del Tribunal significa para ella, su familia y
su comunidad.
• Cejil y Tlachinollan explicaron los alcances y
el impacto de estas sentencias; Emilio Álvarez
Icaza abundó en la relevancia que tienen para el
momento actual.
• Valentina y sus representantes reiteran su
exigencia de seguridad para Inés y Valentina
México, D.F., a 4 de octubre de 2010.- Valentina
Rosendo Cantú y sus representantes -las
organizaciones civiles CEJIL y Tlachinollan-
detallaron en conferencia de prensa los
contenidos y alcances de las sentencias de los
casos de las indígenas me´phaa Inés Fernández
Ortega y Valentina Rosendo Cantú que fueron
notificadas por la Corte Interamericana de
Derechos Humanos (CoIDH) el pasado viernes 1 de
octubre. Esta mañana, en la conferencia, estuvo
presente también el ex ombudsman capitalino,
Emilio Álvarez Icaza y el abogado Mario Patrón.
Valentina Rosendo Cantú explicó su sentir en
este momento en que después de más de ocho años
de búsqueda de justicia, vividos en condiciones
de adversidad y de riesgo, finalmente la CoIDH
le ha dado la razón, estableciendo como un hecho
incontrovertible que fue violada sexualmente y
torturada por soldados mexicanos. “Por fin se
reconoció que siempre dijimos la verdad”, dijo
la mujer Me’phaa. Rosendo Cantú también externó
algunas de sus más sentidas preocupaciones,
compartidas tanto por ella como por Inés
Fernández Ortega, y señaló: “Ya que por fin se
demostró que siempre dijimos la verdad porque no
sabemos mentir, para nosotras y nuestras
familias lo más importante ahorita es que nos
dejen vivir en paz, con tranquilidad”...
Valentina Rosendo Cantú and her representatives
- the organizations CEJIL and the Tlachinollan
Human Rights Center, explained during a press
conference the details of the October 1, 2010
decision by the Inter-American Court of Human
Rights (IACHR) in the cases of Rosendo Cantu and
Inés Fernández Ortega. Emilio Álvarez Icaza,
former director of the Human Rights Commission
for Mexico City, and lawyer Mario Patrón were
present at the event.
Valentina Rosendo Cantú said that, after 8 years
of seeking justice in her case [in which Mexican
soldiers raped her], years that involved
adversity and risks [due to repeated death
threats and acts of retaliation against the
victims and their families], the IACHR has
finally vindicated us.
Justice for Inés
and Valentina
Oct. 04, 2010
See also:
Mexico
|
 |
|
Abel Barrera,
director of the Tlachinollan Center
(left) joins Alejandra Nuño,
Central American director for CEJIL;
Valentina Rosendo Cantú, and Emilio
Álvarez Icaza, former president of
theMexico City Human Rights
Commission - at press conference.
The banner says: "Break Through the
Walls of Impunity." |
Human Rights Court: Mexico responsible for rapes
Mexico City - The Inter-American Court of Human
Rights condemned Mexico on Monday for failing to
protect the rights of two indigenous women who
were raped by soldiers in 2002.
In two separate rulings, the Costa Rica-based
court said Mexico failed to guarantee the rights
to personal integrity, dignity and legal
protection of Valentina Rosendo and Ines
Fernandez, both of southern Guerrero state.
Mexico must publicly acknowledge its
responsibility and called for a civilian
investigation into the crimes, rather than the
military one, which resulted in no charges,
according to the ruling. The government also
must compensate both women and publish the court
rulings in Spanish and the women's indigenous
language, Me'phaa.
The government said will follow the rulings, the
Interior Department said in a statement.
"The government of Mexico reiterates its full
commitment to the promotion and protection of
human rights, in particular to combat violence
against women and girls," the statement said.
It was the fourth condemnation of Mexico from
the court, which previously issued rulings
against the government for the unsolved killings
of women in the border city of Cuidad Juarez in
the 1990s and for the country's "dirty war" in
the 1970s.
Rosendo called on the government to publicly
recognize that it wrongly accused her of lying
about being assaulted.
"If the government has a little bit of dignity,
it should accept they were mistaken so I can go
on with my life," she said tearfully at a news
conference. "They didn't want to hear me in my
own country."
Rosendo, then 17, was washing clothes in a river
in February of 2002 when eight soldiers came up
and asked her about the whereabouts of a masked
suspect. When she said she didn't know anything,
she was beaten and raped.
A month later, in another indigenous community
in Guerrero, at least 11 soldiers approached
Fernandez in her house and asked for her
husband. She didn't respond because she didn't
speak Spanish, and the soldiers raped her.
No one was punished in either case.
E. Eduardo
Castillo
The Associated
Press
Oct. 04, 2010
See also:
Mexico
|
 |
|
Valentina Rosendo
Cantú at the Inter-American Court
session where she presented of her
case on May 28, 2010 |
Mexico Ordered to Pay Damages to Women Raped by
Soldiers
San Jose - The Inter-American Court of Human
Rights ordered the Mexican government to pay
damages to two indigenous women raped by
soldiers in 2002.
The Costa Rica-based court, a body of the
Organization of American States, on Monday
published on its Web page rulings against Mexico
for the rapes of the Indian women Me’phaa
Valentina Rosendo Cantu and Ines Fernandez
Ortega, as well as for the lack of investigation
by the authorities in both cases.
The court’s rulings are binding on OAS members.
Mexico was found to have violated the rights and
personal integrity, dignity and autonomy of the
two indigenous women, who lived in the
municipality of Ayutla de Los Libres, in the
southern state of Guerrero.
In both cases, the Court ordered Mexico to
guarantee that the investigations would be
conducted “with the knowledge of the civil
jurisdiction” and “under no circumstances under
military jurisdiction,” and that those found to
be responsible would be punished.
In the case of Rosendo Cantu, the Court set at a
total of $100,500 the indemnity to which she
would be entitled for material damages,
immaterial damages and trial costs, while the
figure established was $128,000 in the case of
Fernandez Ortega.
The Court also ordered Mexico “to modernize its
legislation” so that human rights violations
will not fall under military jurisdiction and so
that “people affected by the intervention of
military jurisdiction may have effective
recourse to challenge it.”
The state also must take public action to
acknowledge its international responsibility,
authorize study scholarships for the victims and
their children, and ensure that services to care
for female victims of sexual violence “are
provided by the designated institutions,” among
other things...
EFE
Oct. 04, 2010
See also:
Mexico
Mexico Ordered To Pay Damages To Two Indigenous
Women Raped By Soldiers
In two separate rulings, the Inter-American
Court of Human Rights condemned the Mexican
government and ordered it to pay damages to two
indigenous women who were raped in 2002 by
soldiers.
The court said that Mexico failed to guarantee
the rights to personal integrity, dignity and
legal protection of Ines Fernandez and Valentina
Rosendo, both from the southern Mexican state of
Guerrero.
Mexico, which has to publicly acknowledge its
responsibility, must also compensate both women
and publish the court rulings in Spanish and the
women’s indigenous language, Me’phaa. The
Mexican government promised to fulfill the
demands of the court ruling.
“The government of Mexico reiterates its full
commitment to the promotion and protection of
human rights, in particular to combat violence
against women and girls,” according to a
statement released by Mexico’s Interior
Department, the Associated Press reports...
Latin America
News Dispatch
Oct. 05, 2010
See also:
Mexico / The
United States
|
 |
|
Indigenous
human rights activist Abel Barrera
Hernandez, the founder and director
of the Tlachinollan Human Rights
Centre |
Mexican Activist Wins Prestigious Robert F.
Kennedy Human Rights Award
Washington, DC / Mexico City - An anthropologist
and human rights defender who has worked for
years with the indigenous people in one of
Mexico's poorest and most marginalized regions
has been awarded one of the world's most
important human rights prizes.
Abel Barrera Hernandez, the founder and director
of the Tlachinollan Human Rights Centre of the
Montana in the state of Guerrero, will receive
this year's Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights Award
in recognition of his efforts to end abuses
committed by the military and police against the
local population, the RFK Center for Justice and
Human Rights announced here Thursday.
"Our friends at the Tlachinollah Centre
represent true courage in their struggle to
expose and confront ongoing human rights
abuses," said Claudio Grossman, the dean of the
Washington College of Law at American University
and a member of the five-person jury that
decided on this year's winner.
"By standing with the most vulnerable
communities, Abel Barrera Hernandez and his
colleagues are at great personal risk, and we
are proud to recognize their work with this
prestigious award," added Grossman, who also
served as a member of the Inter-American
Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) from 1993 to
2001.
The prize, which will be presented here in
November, was praised by a number of rights
activists who noted that the RFK Center has a
well-established reputation for maintaining
material and political support for its awardees
for many years after the honor is received.
"I think that this prize comes at an especially
important moment because of the tremendous
increase in human rights violations in the
context of the drug war," said Laura Carlsen,
the Mexico-based director of the Americas
Program of the Center for International Policy.
"Last year, human rights groups reported a
six-fold rise in complaints against the army,
and the indigenous populations are suffering the
most. They require the most vigilance from civil
society," she added.
"The centre works in a very difficult and
dangerous situation at the heart of one of the
most marginalized communities in the country,"
said Maureen Meyer, a Mexico specialist at the
Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA), which
gave the centre its annual human rights award
last year...
In 2002, the centre brought the case of Inés
Fernández and Valentina Rosendo, two indigenous
women allegedly raped by soldiers in Guerrero in
2002, to the IACHR, which referred it to the
Inter-American Court of Human Rights, which is
set to hand down a sentence.
In 2005, it defended the right to education for
people of two towns that had been abandoned by
their overworked teaching staff for an entire
year. After filing complaints with the
Department of Education, lobbying state
representatives, and gaining the attention of
national and international media, the Centre
succeeded in obtaining 14 state-appointed
teachers and four additional classrooms.
In the same year, it launched a successful
campaign to formally criminalize forced
disappearances in Guerrero while carrying out
numerous investigations that exposed military
abuses, including torture, disappearance, rape
of indigenous women, arbitrary detentions and
interrogations, intimidation, and dispossession
of lands.
It has also taken up the cases of two human
rights defenders from the Organization of the
Future of the Mixtec People who had been
arrested and later found dead with signs of
torture in February 2009. Those cases resulted
in a new round of threats to centre staff which,
in turn, spurred the IACHR to issue new
protective orders.
The IACHR has issued more than 100 orders to
protect human rights defenders in Guerrero.
The award "represents a shield, from an
organization with great prestige, for a region
that is terribly vulnerable and unprotected, and
where human rights are a dead letter," Barrera
told IPS. "It brings visibility to what the
authorities wish would remain invisible. They
don't want to see the tragedy, the poverty, the
hunger."
"May justice flourish in the mountain, where it
has been suffocated by impunity, by corruption,
by endemic violence, and by the age-old neglect
of the local peoples," he said...
Barrera: "We see the war on drugs in our state
as a war against the poor; there is cruelty
against the indigenous peoples that have been
driven to plant poppies in ravines as a last
measure to ensure their survival," he said.
Jim Lobe and
Emilio Godoy
Inter Press
Service (IPS)
Sep. 23, 2010
See also:
Mexico / The
United States
Abel Barrera Hernandez
speaks about his role in founding the
Tlachinollan Human Rights Centre of the Montana
in the state of Guerrero.
(In Spanish
with English subtitles)
On YouTube,com
Sep. 23, 2010
See also:
Mexico / The
United States
Mexico has failed to prosecute violations,
reduce torture
The US government significantly strengthened its
partnership with Mexico in combating organized
crime in 2007 when it announced the Merida
Initiative, a multi-year US security assistance
package for Mexico. To date, the US government
has allocated roughly $1.5 billion in Merida
funding to Mexico. From the outset, the US
Congress recognized the importance of ensuring
that the Mexican government respect human rights
in its public security efforts, mandating by law
that 15 percent of select Merida funds be
withheld until the State Department issued a
report to the US Congress which showed that
Mexico had demonstrated it was meeting four
human rights requirements.
On September 2, 2010, the State Department
issued its second report to Congress concluding
that Mexico is meeting the Merida Initiative's
human rights requirements, and it stated its
intention to obligate roughly $36 million in
security assistance that had been withheld from
the 2009 supplemental and the 2010 omnibus
budgets.
However, research conducted by our respective
organizations, Mexico's National Human Rights
Commission, and even the State Department's own
reports, demonstrates conclusively that Mexico
has failed to meet the four human rights
requirements set out by law. As a result,
Congress should not release these select Merida
funds. Releasing these funds would send the
message that the United States condones the
grave human rights violations committed in
Mexico, including torture, rape, killings, and
enforced disappearances.
We recognize that Mexico is facing a severe
public security crisis, and that the United
States can play a constructive role in
strengthening Mexico's ability to confront
organized crime in an effective manner. However,
human rights violations committed by Mexican
security forces are not only deplorable in their
own right, but also significantly undermine the
effectiveness of Mexico's public security
efforts...
Human Rights
Watch
Sep. 14, 2010
See also:
Added: Dec. 4, 2010
Mexico
Time
to Speak up on Military Abuse in Mexico
José Miguel
Vivanco, Director - Americas Division - HRW
Human Rights
Watch
May 17, 2010
Alabama, USA
North Alabama man convicted in sex trafficking
of an underage girl
A 31-year-old Florence man was convicted today
of sex trafficking involving an underage girl.
Manuel Enrique Zelaya-Rodriguez was also
convicted in the trial in Huntsville of coercing
a minor to engage in prostitution, harboring an
illegal alien, and failing to file a report with
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement about
an illegal alien in his employment.
Zelaya--Rodriguez will be sentenced by U.S.
District Judge C. Lynwood Smith in a Jan. 19
hearing in Huntsville. He could face a sentence
of up to life in prison.
The case against Zelaya-Rodriguez began Sept. 8,
2009 when he was driving a car that was stopped
by Florence police at a trailer park, according
to court documents. An officer was responding to
complaints about prostitution when he stopped
the car.
Inside the car was a 15-year-old girl who told
police that Zelaya-Rodriguez was prostituting
her, according to court documents. Condoms and
business cards were found inside the car.
The unidentified girl was born in Veracruz,
Mexico, in September 1993, according to a trial
memorandum from prosecutors. The girl became
pregnant when she was 13 years old and later
crossed the border into the U.S. "so that she
could work and send money back to her mother to
care for the victim's baby," according to the
document.
The girl started work in Atlanta as a
prostitute, but fled there after pimps became
violent with her, according to the court
document. The girl got the name of
Zelaya-Rodriguez from another prostitute,
according to the court document filed before the
trial.
"The victim had been with the defendant for
approximately two weeks, and during that time
the victim had engaged in commercial sex acts
with approximately forty and fifty men,"
according to the trial memorandum.
"We have shut down this particular trafficker
and, hopefully, given pause to others who would
commit the same morally reprehensible crime,"
U.S. Attorney Joyce White Vance said in a press
statement after the jury returned its verdict
Wednesday.
"Human trafficking for purposes of sexual
exploitation and forced labor is a growing
problem in North Alabama and across the country
and is a grave concern of the Department of
Justice," she said. "We want a zero-tolerance
policy on this crime."
Florence police, the FBI, and ICE investigated
the case.
"The FBI is committed to working with ICE and
our other law enforcement partners to combat
human trafficking, which is modern day slavery,
and bring to justice those who would deny
individuals of their fundamental right to
freedom," Patrick Maley, special agent in charge
of the FBI's Birmingham office, said in the
prepared statement.
Al.com
Sep. 22, 2010
Added: Dec. 4, 2010
California, USA
Man
arrested in sex case involving Encinitas teen
Girl had made
up story she was gang-raped; authorities say she
had sex with 20-year-old she met on Internet
Encinitas - Sheriff’s detectives have arrested a
20-year-old Vista man who they say had sex with
a 15-year-old Encinitas girl, authorities said
Wednesday.
The teen initially told authorities she was
raped by three men rather than admit to her
mother she had gone off with a man she met on
the Internet.
Jose Adrian Cano was arrested Tuesday night and
booked on suspicion of unlawful intercourse with
a minor, lewd acts with a 15-year-old, and
contacting a minor online with intent to commit
a sex crime.
Investigators say they have evidence of three
more under-age victims and want any others to
come forward to report contact with Cano.
He is being held in the Vista jail without bail
because federal immigration authorities have put
a hold on him. Lauren Mack, Immigration and
Customs Enforcement spokeswoman, said Cano is
listed in the agency’s records as Cano-Cid and
is suspected of being in the United States
illegally.
Mack said Cano was arrested earlier this year by
a police agency in San Diego County and federal
officials returned him to Mexico without a
deportation hearing.
Pauline Repard
The San Diego
Union-Tribune
Sep. 29, 2010
California, USA
Man
Tries to Kidnap Teen Girl Walking to School
San Jacinto - Police in Riverside County are
searching for a man who tried to kidnap a
15-year-old girl as she was walking to school.
The attempted kidnapping happened just after 6
a.m. Thursday on Lyon Avenue, south of Merlot
Place, in San Jacinto.
Police say the suspect approached the girl from
behind and grabbed her arm, but she was able to
fight him off.
A passing driver saw the struggle and called
911, and the suspect ran from the area.
The suspect is described as a Hispanic man,
about 19- or 20-years-old, and 5'9" tall. He has
a thin build, short "spiked" brown hair and
brown eyes. The man was last seen wearing blue
jeans and a white t-shirt.
Anyone with information about the suspect is
asked to call San Jacinto Police at
951-487-7368.
KTLA News
Oct. 1, 2010
Mexico
|
 |
|
Outgoing
director of Mexico's National
Institute for Migration Cecilia
Romero |
Cecilia Romero sale de Migración
La funcionaria
fue notificada que sería removida, por lo que
elaboró una carta de despedida para sus
colaboradores; en el último mes su posición en
el cargo se vio debilitada por la masacre de 72
migrantes en Tamaulipas
El gobierno federal confirmó que Cecilia Romero
dejó a partir de hoy el cargo como comisionada
del Instituto Nacional de Migración (INM) luego
de la matanza de 72 migrantes de distintas
nacionalidades en el estado de Tamaulipas.
De acuerdo con fuentes gubernamentales, Romero
fue notificada este lunes que sería removida de
esa posición, por lo que la funcionaria elaboró
una carta de despedida que circuló de manera
interna en el INM por el sistema de intranet.
En el texto, Romero agradeció el "trabajo,
saludo, apoyo y sonrisa" de sus colaboradores,
con quienes se reunió por la mañana para revisar
temas pendientes de la agenda migratoria y los
exhortó a seguir adelante porque dicha labor no
es una moda y parte de una época, sino de una
institución, las cuales perduran por encima de
las personas.
En agosto pasado un inmigrante de origen
ecuatoriano acudió a una caseta naval para
denunciar la ejecución de personas en un rancho
ubicado en el estado de Tamaulipas, hecho que
permitió conocer la noticia de 72 víctimas que
habrían caído abatidas presuntamente a manos de
los Zetas.
Funcionarios federales definirán en las próximas
horas la vía institucional para dar a conocer el
cambio de Romero, el cual puede formalizarse en
Los Pinos o la Secretaría de Gobernación
(Segob).
José Gerardo
Mejía
El Universal
Sep. 14, 2010
See also:
Mexico
Migration-Mexico: Crisis Sparked by Massacre
Spurs Demands for In-depth Changes
Organizations working for the rights of
undocumented immigrants are using the crisis
triggered by the massacre of 72 migrants a few
weeks ago near the U.S. border to press for
in-depth changes in Mexico.
'The migration authorities do not have a human
rights perspective, and their position is
inconsistent with the reality of migration in
this country,' Diana Martínez, assistant
coordinator of advocacy at Sin Fronteras, a
non-governmental organization (NGO) that
promotes the rights of migrants and provides
them with legal advice, told IPS.
The killing of the undocumented migrants from
several Latin American countries, whose bound,
blindfolded bodies were found Aug. 24 on a
remote ranch in San Fernando, in the
northeastern Mexican state of Tamaulipas,
unleashed the worst ever migration-related
crisis in this country.
The mass murder, which was survived by at least
one man from Ecuador, one from Honduras and one
from El Salvador, brought down National
Migration Institute (INM) Commissioner Cecilia
Romero, who resigned Tuesday Sept. 14.
Romero, a former senator for the governing
National Action Party (PAN), had ridden out
earlier rumors that she would leave the top job
at the INM, which she held since December 2006.
But the heat and pressure generated by the
shocking event made her position untenable...
An estimated 500,000 Latin Americans a year
cross Mexico heading for the United States,
according to experts and NGOs. Along the way
they face arbitrary arrest, extortion, robbery,
rape and kidnapping, especially at the hands of
Los Zetas, a criminal organization that
dominates the kidnapping of undocumented
migrants racket.
'The Mexican state must design a truly
comprehensive state policy on migration that is
not limited to managing migratory flows, but is
centrally focused on the human rights of
migrants,' said Martínez of Sin Fronteras...
Migrant protection organizations have urged the
Mexican state to issue an official invitation to
Felipe González, rapporteur on the rights of
migrant workers and their families for the
Washington-based Inter-American Commission on
Human Rights (IACHR), part of the Organisation
of American States (OAS) human rights system.
In his March 2009 report, the United Nations
Special Rapporteur on the human rights of
migrants, Jorge Bustamante, recommended
legislative reforms to combat the impunity
surrounding human rights abuses in this
country...
Emilio Godoy
Inter Press
Service
Sep. 16, 2010
See also:
Mexico
Mexican immigration official quits after
massacre
Mexico - Mexico's top immigration official
resigned Monday in the wake of a massacre of 72
migrants that exposed how brutally drug cartels
have come to control human smuggling routes in
the country.
Cecilia Romero stepped down as head of the
National Institute of Migration, a post she had
held since the beginning of President Felipe
Calderon's term in December 2006, the Interior
Department said in a statement.
The statement gave no reason for her
resignation, only praising Romero's efforts to
modernize the Mexico's immigration system and
improve the treatment of migrants. It did not
name her replacement.
A government official, who spoke on condition of
anonymity because he was not authorized to speak
publicly about the issue, said the government
was looking for someone with more experience in
security to head the institute.
The official said the massacre three weeks ago
highlighted how intertwined drug trafficking and
illegal immigration have become in Mexico.
"She's revamped the institute and made it a more
human and respectful place," the official said.
"Given that organized crime has gotten into the
business, we need a different type of head with
a different type of background."
The bodies of the 72 Central and South American
migrants were found Aug. 24 at a ranch about 100
miles (80 kilometers) south of Brownsville,
Texas...
Drug cartels have long controlled migration
corridors in Mexico, demanding that migrants pay
for passage through their territory. Now,
Mexican authorities say drug cartels are
increasingly trying to recruit vulnerable
migrants to smuggle drugs.
Romero, a former congresswoman who steadily rose
up in Calderon's National Action Party, revamped
migrant holding centers across the country and
ensured that immigration agents were trained in
human rights, the Interior Department said in
its statement.
...The government has come under intense
criticism for continuing abuses against
migrants, who are constantly kidnapped and
assaulted as they pass through Mexico — often
with the collusion of corrupt police or
immigration agents.
Hours before Romero's resignation was announced,
Mexico's Congress summoned her to a hearing to
explain what the government was doing to protect
migrants.
Opposition legislators warned Mexico was losing
its moral right to demand better treatment for
immigrants in the United States.
The massacre "is the tip of the iceberg that
revealed the neglect of Mexican authorities, who
are incapable of meeting its responsibilities in
human rights," said Sen. Ricardo Monreal Avila
of the Workers' Party.
Alexandra Olson
The Associated
Press
Sep. 14, 2010
See also:
Mexico
Romero leaves the INM
Mexico City – For reasons unknown, Cecilia
Romero, commissioner of the National Migration
Institute (INM), announced on Tuesday that she
is leaving her job.
“Today is my last day as commissioner of the
INM. I thank each and every one of you for your
work, effort and participation during the
transformation of the INM,” Romero said to INM
members during her farewell message. She did not
say whether she quit or was fired and did not
give any reasons for leaving her position.
Her departure is taking place three weeks after
the Navy found the bodies of 72 illegal
immigrants in the state of Tamaulipas in
northeastern Mexico. Romero recently said it was
“natural” that there were several rumors of her
leaving after the tragedy in Tamaulipas. “I
think it is only natural that there are rumors
like this when there is a crisis as big as this
one, of national security and of organized
crime,” she said...
The News
Sep. 15, 2010
See also:
Added: Oct. 1, 2010
Mexico
Evalúa Segob trabajo de Romero en Migración
Mexico's Interior
Department to investigate the work of National
Institute for Migration director Cecilia Romero
La lupa está
sobre migración despues de la masacre de 72
migrantes en Tamaulipas
El secretario de Gobernación, José Francisco
Blake Mora, reveló que al interior de su
dependencia están evaluando el trabajo de la
titular de migración, Cecilia Romero.
Ante las versiones de que habría renunciado el
encargado de la política interior del país, dijo
que sólo están revisando como en todas las
acciones del gobierno su actuación y en su
momento vendrán definiciones
Entrevistado al participar en el IV Informe de
Gobierno de Felipe Calderón, Blake Mora, dijo
que se enfocará en la evaluación al trabajo de
Cecilia Romero después de la masacre de 72
migrantes en Tamaulipas, hace unos días.
¿Se queda la titular de migración en su cargo?,
se le preguntó
- Estamos revisando, estamos evaluando como en
todas las acciones del gobierno que tienen que
ser evaluadas, ya en su oportunidad tomaremos
definiciones.
¿Para cuándo las conclusiones?
-Voy a trabajar y cuando las tenga seguramente
se las informo.
El Universal
Sep. 02, 2010
See also:
Added:
June 28, 2009
Mexico
|
 |
|
Cecilia Romero,
head of Mexico's national
immigration service, says that
sex tourism and pedophile
networks are "inevitable."
"El
turismo sexual es inevitable"
- Cecilia Romero del Instituto
Nacional de Migración de México
Photo: El
Universal |
LibertadLatina
Commentary
President Calderón,
the Human Rights Crisis at Mexico's Southern
Border is Unacceptable
Our current series of articles covering the
human rights emergency facing women and girl
migrants at Mexico's southern border
responds directly to the recent comments of
Cecilia Romero, head of Mexico's national
immigration service (the National Institute
for Migration - INM).
Director Romero stated in a press interview
with El Universal, a major Mexico City daily
paper, that human trafficking is
"inevitable", and that, "the existence of
the smuggling of migrants, human
trafficking, pedophile networks, and the
kidnappings and the violence that affect
thousands of migrants are only "evils of
mankind" that Mexico cannot eradicate.
We strongly disagree with
Director Romero and others in the leadership
of Mexico's National Action Party, who
habitually dismiss critical women's rights
issues, including the femicide murders in
Ciudad Juarez, as being the inevitable, and
'normal' results of male human behavior.
Nothing could be further from
the truth.
The citizens of Mexico,
Mexico's Congress and the international
community need to hold the government of
President Felipe Calderón accountable for
the fact that he is allowing a steady stream
of unending mass gender atrocities to
occur on Mexico's southern border with
Guatemala and Belize.
In that hell-on-earth, an
estimated 450 to 600 migrant women and girls
are sexually assaulted each day, according
to the International Organization for
Migration. Police response is almost
non-existent. At times police officers are
complicit in this criminal violence.
Mexico's southern border is
also the largest zone on earth for the
commercial sexual exploitation of children
(CSEC), according to Save the Children.
As Father Luis Nieto
states in an article about Salvadoran
mothers who must come to Mexico's border to
grieve for their raped and murdered
daughters, "We cannot
keep quiet, we cannot be complicit in this."
We strongly agree with that
sentiment. Silence is also violence.
The federal government of
Mexico is not ignorant in regard to this
ongoing human catastrophe. The United
Nations, the International Organization for
Migration, Save the Children, elements of
the Catholic Church, the National Human
Rights Commission (CNDH) and many members of
Congress have, for the past several years,
demanded action to end these atrocities.
Although INM director Cecilia
Romero promised in February of 2007 that she
would "entirely
eliminate this terrible situation,"
no visible action has been taken to do
so as of June of 2009, 16 months after she
made that promise.
With the current economic
slowdown and the expansion of global
criminal sex trafficking operations, the
rapes, kidnappings and brutal sexual
enslavement of innocent migrants on that
border is increasing with no end in sight.
As the United States Congress
prepares to send over $400 million dollars
in largely military aid to Mexico as part of
the Merida Initiative to combat the drug
cartels, we insist that human rights
conditions be placed on those and other U.S.
foreign aid funds that are headed to Mexico.
Mexico must close down the
mass rape, kidnapping, murder and
child sex trafficking gauntlet that exists
with total impunity on its southern border.
We also want to see the
estimated 4,000 mostly Mayan indigenous
children who were kidnapped by the Yakuza
mafias from this region and sold to brothels
in Tokyo, and also the uncounted thousands
of other indigenous child victims who have
been sold to brothels in New York and Madrid
rescued, repatriated and then truly cared
for.
Do you need money, President
Calderón, to get these things done? Or is a
misogynist, 'socially conservative' ideology
that is resurgent in Mexico, and that has as
its strongest voice the PAN political party,
the real problem here?
¡Esta
barbarie no será perdonado por Dios!
This
barbarity will not be pardoned by God!
If Mexico does not have
control over this part of its own territory,
or if, as actually appears to be the
case, the PAN's socially conservative agenda
won't allow it to defend innocent and
vulnerable women and children in crisis,
consistent with their apathetic reaction to
the femicide murders in Ciudad Juarez, then
perhaps an international force organized by
the Organization of American States, or by
the United Nations needs to step up to the
plate, offer to help Mexico, and take
control of the situation.
This crisis in Mexico is the
best example in the Americas of why a new
Global Plan of Action, as proposed by
Ecuadorian Minister of
Justice and Human Rights (Attorney General)
Néstor Arbito Chica
and diplomats gathered at the
United Nations on May 13, 2009, is needed to
get around this impasse.
Somehow, the fact that the
government of Mexico is a signatory to the
Palermo Protocol,
and the fact that Mexico passed its 2009
U.S. Department of State Trafficking in
Persons Report evaluation with a relatively
positive Level 2 Rating (as we also
acknowledge State's strong critique of
corruption in Mexico), misses the point.
New and out-of-the box
strategies are needed to oblige Mexico to
fulfill its international obligations to
end this ongoing mass gender atrocity
once and for all.
It is not an impossible task.
The status quo today is...
unacceptable!
End impunity now!
Chuck Goolsby
LibertadLatina
June 28, 2009
Updated Oct. 2, 2010
See also:
Mexico
The city of Tapachula,
located in Chiapas state near Mexico's border
with Guatemala,
is one of the largest and most lawless child sex
trafficking markets in all of Latin America.
Our news section on Tapachula tracks
events related to this hell-on-earth, where over
half of the estimated 21,000 sex slaves and
other sex workers are underage, and where
especially migrant women and girls from Central
and South America, who seek to migrate to the
United States, have their freedom taken from
them, to become a money-making commodity for
gangs of violent criminals.
A 2007 study by the international organization
ECPAT
[End Child Prostitution and Trafficking]...
revealed that over 21,000 Central Americans,
mostly children, are prostituted in 1,552 bars
and brothels in Tapachula.
- Chuck Goolsby
Libertad Latina
Mexico
La
trata de personas no se persigue en el país.
Apenas seis entidades
Gobiernos
soslayan la trata de personas
...La trata de personas no se persigue en el
país. Apenas seis entidades —Chiapas, Distrito
Federal, Nuevo León, Tabasco y Tlaxcala, además
de Hidalgo que ayer la aprobó—, tienen
legislación sobre la materia. El resto a
excepción de Campeche y Tamaulipas tipificaron
el delito en sus códigos penales. Sin embargo,
sólo 12 estados cuentan con una legislación
armonizada con el Protocolo de Palermo.
Organismos civiles ubican a Puebla y Tlaxcala
dentro de los cinco principales “corredores” de
traslado de personas que son explotadas sexual y
laboralmente. Se estima que de 60 municipios que
integran el estado de Tlaxcala en al menos 26 se
han establecido redes de tratantes.
Government
overlooks modern slavery
Human
trafficking is not being fought in Mexico
Tenancingo [a major city in Tlaxcala state] -
The streets here are different from those in any
other region of rural Tlaxcala state. The city's
population does not live by farming, nor do they
live in humble dwellings. From the time you
enter the city, the air is tense. The
ostentatious two-to-four floor houses become
immediately visible.
Luxury Mustangs, Corvettes and Dodge trucks with
tinted windows line the cobblestone streets.
Chatting with people is almost impossible for
outsiders. Locals immediately know who is a
stranger. They seem to alert everyone about the
presence of outsiders. The
Lenones [family
based sex trafficking mafias] are there. At Noon
they stop to eat pork quesadillas. It's their
territory.
About 30 miles south of Tlaxcala, in the city of
Puebla, two men descend from a fancy Mustang
blaring reggaeton music. Their imposing presence
makes it hard to look at them face-to-face. Each
of them is wearing three gold chains and
sportswear made by international companies.
The municipal police look at them with the
familiarity that is just part of the daily
rhythm of life. The same is true of the mothers
of children returning to school. The locals are
watched and subdued. Within minutes, a group of
students questions the reason for my visit. They
say that it would be better for me to leave
their neighborhood in the company of the Mexican
Army troops stationed nearby.
On Wednesday night, federal forces besieged a
residential street in the City, presumably in
search of a sexual exploitation network. The
outcome of their effort is unknown. There were
no arrests. Seven soldiers without identifying
clothing remain on guard outside the house. They
call upon the reporters present to leave. They
claim that "no operation ever took place," and
say that in Tenancingo, "everything is normal,"
although the place is known internationally as a
center for sex trafficking.
Human trafficking is not being pursued in this
country. Only the Federal District [Mexico City]
and six states, Chiapas, Nuevo León,
Tabasco, Tlaxcala and Hidalgo have passed
legislation to govern human trafficking. The
remaining states, with the exception of Campeche
and Tamaulipas, have specified the crime in
their penal codes. However, only 12 states have
harmonized their state legislation with the
Palermo Protocol.
Non-governmental organizations located in Puebla
and Tlaxcala call the region one of the top five
"corridors" in Mexico for trafficking in persons
who are exploited for sex and labor. It is
estimated that human trafficking networks
operate in at least 26 of the 60 municipalities
in the state of Tlaxcala....
Tlaxcala ranks sixth nationally in human
trafficking as a result of its environment of
violence, a lax criminal justice system and poor
security. Puebla state holds 5th place...
El Universal
Sep. 24, 2010
Mexico
|
 |
|
Officials from
Mexico's Chiapas state, together
with the IOM, launch a major media
campaign against human trafficking |
Emprenden Gobierno de Chiapas y OIM campaña
contra la trata de personas
Con el objetivo de proteger a los grupos más
vulnerables, el gobierno de Chiapas, a través de
la Secretaría para el Desarrollo de la Frontera
Sur y Enlace para la Cooperación Internacional,
une esfuerzos a la Organización Internacional
para las Migraciones para combatir la trata de
personas mediante una amplia campaña mediática.
Siendo Chiapas un estado de tránsito de
migrantes, es prioritario que ellos sepan que
hacerlo indocumentadamente no es sinónimo de
indefensión, sino por el contrario, en Chiapas
se comprende el sentido de su viaje en búsqueda
de una mejora calidad de vida y la
vulnerabilidad con la que lo efectúan. Es por
eso que el gobierno de Chiapas, encabezado por
Juan Sabines Guerrero, trabaja en transformar la
frontera sur de México en una frontera amiga y
de oportunidades y que no escatima esfuerzos en
llevarlo a cabo.
Bajo el slogan “No permitas que destruyan tu
vida”, se lanza el día de hoy una ambiciosa
campaña en medios masivos como la televisión y
radio, así como espectaculares, pantallas de
proyección, material impreso e internet, con lo
que se pretende concientizar a la ciudadanía de
que la trata de personas es evitable y se
combate con la denuncia; además de que tengan la
seguridad de que recibirán todo el apoyo,
asistencia y protección en caso de ser víctimas
de este flagelo. Es importante destacar que la
parte medular de la campaña se concentra en la
posibilidad de hacer una denuncia anónima y sin
costo al 018007152000...
The state government of
Chiapas and the International Organization for
Migration launch media campaign against human
trafficking
Seeking to protect the most vulnerable groups in
society, the government of the southern Mexican
state of Chiapas, through its Secretary for the
Development of the Southern Frontier and its
Network for International Cooperation, has
joined forces with the [United Nations
affiliated] International Organization for
Migration to present a new and large scale media
campaign to educate the public about the dangers
of human trafficking.
Given that Chiapas state is a [major] transit
point for migrants [it is the bottleneck point
for almost all Central and South American
migration to the U.S.], the campaign's priority
to let migrants know that their state of being
undocumented does not mean that they are
defenseless. To the contrary, the campaign
stated, Chiapas understands the motives that
cause people to migrate in search of a better
life, as well as the vulnerabilities that go
along with migration. For these reasons, the
government of Chiapas state, headed by governor
Juan Sabines Guerrero, is dedicating significant
resources to achieve the goal of transforming
the southern border of Mexico into a friendly
frontier of opportunities.
Using the slogan "Don't Allow Them to Destroy
Your Life," the ambitious media campaign is
being launched today through public service
advertising on television, radio, and through
materials presented at major public events and
on the Internet. The campaign will raise public
awareness about human trafficking, and will
drive home the point that becoming a victim of
trafficking is avoidable. The campaign
emphasizes that victims will receive every form
of assistance and protection. An anonymous
hotline, at telephone number 018007152000, has
also been opened...
Diario Chiapas
Hoy
Sep. 27, 2010
India
Human trafficking slur on Commonwealth Games
The jinxed Commonwealth Games could have done
without this. After being troubled by brittle
infrastructure, CWG 2010 has now been blamed for
a jump in trafficking of women and children from
the Northeast. The accusation has come from
Meghalaya People’s Human Rights Council (MPHRC)
general secretary Dino D.G. Dympep. The platform
he chose on Tuesday was the general debate
discussion on racism, discrimination, xenophobia
and other intolerance at the 15th Human Rights
Council Session at the UN headquarters in
Geneva, Switzerland.
“The human rights situation of indigenous
peoples living in Northeast India is
deteriorating,” Dympep said, adding New Delhi
has chose to be indifferent to human trafficking
of and racial discrimination toward these
indigenous groups.
“What worries the indigenous peoples now apart
from racial and gender-based violence is the
fear of alleged human trafficking for flesh
trade.” The number of indigenous women and
children trafficked particularly for the
upcoming CGW could be 15,000, he said.
The rights activist also underscored the racial
profiling of people from the Northeast on the
basis of their ethnicity, linguistic, religious,
cultural and geographical backgrounds.
Dympep also pointed out 86 per cent of
indigenous peoples studying or working away from
their native places face racial discrimination
in various forms such as sexual abuses, rapes,
physical attacks and economic exploitation.
“The UN has condemned India's caste system and
termed it worse than racism. The racism faced by
indigenous peoples of the Northeast is
definitely the outcome of the caste system. Such
negative attitude as ignoring the region will
only lead to deeper self-alienation by the
indigenous peoples, which comes in the way of
integration in India,” he said.
Rahul Karmakar
Hindustan Times
Sep. 28, 2010
LibertadLatina
Note:
Indigenous peoples across the
world face the problem of being marginalized by
the dominant societies that surround them. They
become the easiest targets for human traffickers
because the larger society will not stand up to
defend their basic human rights. Exploiting the
lives and the sexuality of indigenous women is a
key aspect of this dynamic of oppression.
We at
LibertadLatina
denounce all forms of exploitation. We call the
world's attention to the fact that tens of
thousands of indigenous peoples in the Americas,
and most especially women and girls in Guatemala
and Mexico, are routinely being kidnapped or
cajoled into becoming victims of human
trafficking.
For 5 centuries, the economies of
Latin America have relied upon the forced labor
and sexual exploitation of the region's
indigenous peoples as a cornerstone of their
economic and social lives. Mexico, with an
indigenous population that comprises 30% of the
nation, is a glaring example of this dynamic of
racial, ethnic and gender (machismo) based
oppression. In Mexico, indigenous victims are
not 'visible' to the authorities, and are on
nobody's list of social groups who need to be
assisted to defend themselves against the
criminal impunity of the sex and labor
trafficking mafias.
For Mexico to arrive in the 21st
Century community of nations, it must begin the
process of ending these feudal-era traditions.
End impunity now!
Chuck Goolsby
LibertadLatina
Oregon, USA
Police warn of man exposing himself near
Portland school
Portland - A man was spotted exposing himself
near a Southeast Portland school Monday morning
and now police are warning people to beware of
the lurking sex offender.
“A subject was observed openly masturbating in
his vehicle parked near Southeast 26th Avenue
and Grant Street in view of the public. Four
female students from Hosford Middle School
walked past his vehicle on their way to school
and he soon started his car, followed them for
about a block and pulled over next to them as if
to make contact with them while still
masturbating,” said Lt. Kelli Sheffer with the
Portland Police Bureau.
Then, just a few minutes later, Sheffer said the
suspect contacted a different female student in
the same area, telling her he liked her shirt.
At one point, the man got out of the car and
walked after a student, police said.
The suspect was described as a Hispanic man in
his 20's to late 30's, about 5'2 and 150 pounds,
with very short dark hair, wearing a
light-colored shirt and dark pants or jeans.
Police said his head was almost shaved and he
had a mustache and a goatee.
His vehicle was described as an older model,
white 4-door smaller car, possibly a Pontiac,
with a dent on one of the front fenders,
possibly black wheels and black bumpers, with
black scratches on the rear passenger side
fender.
Anyone with information about the suspect was
urged to call 9-1-1.
Teresa Blackman
KGW
Sep. 28, 2010
California, USA
Man
Arrested for Peeping in School Bathroom
Covina - Police have arrested a suspect accused
of peeping at a student in a bathroom stall at
Las Palmas Middle School in Covina.
The suspect, who told police his name was
Cristian Estrada Diaz, was arrested Tuesday
morning. His fingerprints, however, identified
him as Juan Hernandez, 31, according to Covina
Sgt. Dave Foster. Detectives are trying to
determine his true identity.
Foster says the man is a Covina resident. He
does not speak English and had no identification
on him, according to Foster.
The man was arrested on suspicion of making
contact with a minor with intent to commit a
sexual act.
The suspect is accused of entering the girls'
bathroom on Friday and crawling on his knees
under a bathroom stall to spy on a girl. He ran
when another student walked in and noticed him.
He fled on a blue bike...
Detectives are trying to figure out if the man
is responsible for other similar cases in the
area.
Anyone with information is asked to call the
Covina Police Department at (626) 384-5808.
KTLA
Sep. 28, 2010
We present full
bilingual coverage of the
Second Latin
American Congress on Human Trafficking
Mexico
Buscaremos romper el cerco de los “guardianes
del patriarcado”
El delito de trata de personas es tan complejo,
que el discutir próximamente sobre el acceso a
la justicia y restitución de derechos para las
víctimas, permitirá a quienes estamos luchando
contra éste, homogeneizar criterios y exigir con
mejores herramientas a las autoridades
judiciales de Latinoamericana, que cumplan con
la ley.
La directora Regional de la Coalición contra la
Trata y Tráfico de Mujeres y Niñas en América
Latina y el Caribe, Asociación Civil (CATW-LAC),
Teresa Ulloa Ziaurriz,
dijo a Cimacnoticias que la complejidad del
delito de trata, ha impedido su tipificación, y
por ende demostrarlo, para lograr sentenciar a
los proxenetas.
Al cierre del II Congreso Latinoamericano contra
la Trata y Tráfico de Personas: Migración,
Género y Derechos Humanos que se realizó en esta
ciudad, dijo que una vez que ya se conoce la
agenda del próximo Congreso a efectuarse en Perú
en 2012; el intercambio de ideas entre la
academia, organizaciones de la sociedad civil e
incluso con autoridades, generará ideas más
claras sobre cómo resolver la problemática.
Reconoció que en América Latina se ha avanzado
en la elaboración de leyes, pero no se ha
logrado que sean efectivas, que haya sentencias,
“ y yo coincido con lo que dicen las españolas
que los jueces son los guardianes más celosos
del patriarcado y eso es lo que tenemos que
romper”, aseguró...
We Seek to Break the Ring
of the Guardians of Patriarchy
The crime of human trafficking is hugely
complex. Therefore, during the next Congress on
Human Trafficking in Latin America, to be held
in Lima, Peru in 2012, the event will focus its
attentions on developing strategies to resolve
one of the largest problems that we face,
gaining access to equal justice and restitution
for victims. The 2012 Congress will allow those
who are fighting against modern human slavery to
collaborate to create a common legal framework
to address human trafficking and to demand
improved legal tools from Latin America's
judicial institutions. The Congress will also
insist that the region's governments must comply
with the laws governing these crimes.
Teresa Ulloa Ziaurriz,
director of the Coalition Against Trafficking of
Women and Girls for Latin America and the
Caribbean (CATW-LAC)
[and a veteran women's rights lawyer in Mexico],
told the CIMAC News that the complexity of this
crime has impeded its classification [in the
criminal code] and use in sentencing traffickers
and pimps.
At the close of the Second Congress on Human
Trafficking, Migration, Gender and Human Rights,
held from Sep. 21 to 24, 2010 in Puebla, Mexico,
Ulloa declared that once the agenda for the 2012
Congress is determined, the mechanisms will be
in place that will allow for an exchange of
ideas between academics, civil society and
government officials, to generate clear
strategies in regard to what needs to be done to
effectively address this problem.
Ulloa recognized that laws have advanced across
Latin America. However those laws are not
enforced, resulting in a lack of the actual
sentencing of convicted traffickers. Ulloa, "I
agree with the what people say in Spain, that
judges are the most jealous guardians of
patriarchy. That [ring of power - old boy's
club] is what we have to break through..."
Elizabeth Muñoz
Vásquez
CIMAC Women's
News Service
Sep. 27, 2010
Mexico
|
 |
|
Dr.
Raquel
Pastor,
the
Academic Secretary of the Second
Latin American Congress on Human
Trafficking, in a photo from an
earlier anti-trafficking press
conference |
Condena unánime contra migración forzada y
aumento de trata en AL
Pronunciamiento del II Congreso Latinoamericano
sobre trata
Puebla, Puebla - Con una condena a las
autoridades de Puebla, México y Latinoamérica,
que han reprimido a aquellas personas que se
atreven a denunciar y combatir el delito de
trata, y a la masacre de los migrantes
centroamericanos ejecutados hace unas semanas en
San Fernando, Tamaulipas, concluyó aquí el II
Congreso Latinoamericano sobre Trata y Tráfico
de Personas: Migración, Género y Derechos
Humanos.
Raquel Pastor, Secretaria Académica del Segundo
Congreso y representante del Centro de Estudios
Sociales y Culturales Antonio Montesinos AC de
México, al dar lectura al pronunciamiento
precisó que las y los integrantes al evento
condenan “los hechos que violentan los derechos
humanos, la migración forzada, el aumento de
casos de trata en la región”.
Demandamos, dijo, las investigaciones
correspondientes exhaustivas para que los
crímenes de Tamaulipas, no queden en la
impunidad y sean restituidos los derechos de las
familias de las víctimas.
De igual manera dijo, “condenamos también los
actos represivos y de persecución en contra de
aquellas personas que se atreven a denunciar,
como los que llevan a cabo algunos gobernantes
en Puebla, México y Latinoamérica para acallar y
encubrir la vulneración de los derechos de las
niñas víctimas de explotación sexual...
Second Latin American
Congress on Human Trafficking concludes with a
unanimous condemnation of forced migration and
slavery in Latin America
Puebla city in Puebla state – The Second Latin American Congress on
Human Trafficking ended four days of events
today by condemning government authorities in
Puebla State [Mexico], in Mexico itself as well
as among governments across Latin America for
repressing those persons who have dared to speak
up about, combat and report cases of human
trafficking. In addition, the Congress also
deplored the recent massacre of 72 Central and
South American migrants in the Mexican state of
Tamaulipas.
Dr. Raquel Pastor, the Academic Secretary of the
Second Congress and a representative of the
Antonio Montesinos Center for Social and
Cultural Studies of Mexico, declared that the
participants in the Congress “denounce ongoing
events that violently deny human rights,
including forced migration and the increase in
human trafficking cases in the region.”
We demand, she said, exhaustive investigations
into the massacre in Tamaulipas, so that this
crime does not remain unchallenged, and so that
the rights of the victim’s families are
restored.
Equally, Dr. Pastor stated,
“we also condemn the acts
of repression and persecution that have been
taken against those persons who have dared to
report trafficking cases, such as those that
have been perpetrated by government officials
across Latin America, including in Puebla state,
Mexico [see
the Lydia Cacho case], in their
efforts to cover-up and silence the sexual
exploitation of girl [and women] victims.
Dr. Pastor underlined the fact that the
participants in the Congress are speaking-up to
pressure the nations of Latin America to reform
and modernize their criminal justice systems, so
that the definition-of and persecution-of
trafficking crimes become focused on protecting
the dignity of girls, boys, adolescents and
women.
Dr. Pastor asked that academic investigations be
undertaken with the participation of civil
society and government entities to allow for the
development of a body of knowledge about
trafficking, as well as to support the
development of public policies and protocols
that will result in actions and criminal
investigations that focus on those who suffer as
victims of these crimes.
Dr. Pastor stated - 'We demand these nations
address the proposals and the body of experience
that non-governmental organizations bring to the
table, and that they adopt the best practices
that NGOs have developed in the fields of
preventing trafficking, and attending to the
needs of victims. We especially call-upon Chile
and Paraguay to pass laws against human
trafficking, given that they are the only
nations in Latin America not to have done so.'
The Congress also expressed its support for
organizations in Puebla and Tlaxcala states, who
have developed the Agenda for the Protection of
Women and Girls Against Human Trafficking, and
who are demanding punishment for elected and
other officials at all levels of government who
have benefited from human trafficking
activities.
The creation of a Latin American 'Observatory'
[think tank] for Human Trafficking was
announced, with the goal of creating a center
that will allow for the analysis of
anti-trafficking efforts being carried out
across the nations of the region.
The Congress will also create a web site, a
system of statistical indicators, and will
create spaces to allow for dialog and reflection
among participants before and after each
Congress.
The Third Latin American Congress on Human
Trafficking will take place in Lima, Peru in
2012. The themes will be: “Access to Justice and
the Restitution of Rights.”
Oscar Castro Soto, director of the Ignacio
Ellacuria Human Rights Institute at the
Ibero-American University in Puebla, stated that
some 600 persons attended the Second Congress.
Two hundred fifty presentations were make by
subject matter experts, and 7 sessions by
keynote speakers were presented.
Elizabeth Muñoz
Vasquez
CIMAC Women's
News Agency
Sep. 24, 201-
Haiti
Haitian Women at Increased Risk of Trafficking
Puebla, Mexico - The January earthquake that
devastated Haiti put women and girls in the
poorest country in the hemisphere at an
increased risk of falling prey to people
trafficking, activists and experts warn.
"The phenomenon has become much more visible
since the earthquake, with the increase in the
forced displacement of persons," said Bridget
Wooding, a researcher who specializes in
immigration at the Latin American Faculty of
Social Sciences (FLACSO) in the Dominican
Republic, which shares the island of Hispaniola
with Haiti.
"There is huge vulnerability to a rise in human
trafficking and smuggling," she told IPS.
The Dominican Republic and the United States are
the main destinations for Haitian migrants. The
figures vary, but there are between 500,000 and
800,000 Haitians and people of Haitian descent
in the U.S. and between one and two million in
the Dominican Republic.
Women in Haiti "are exposed to forced
prostitution, rape, abandonment and
pornography," Mesadieu Guylande, a Haitian
expert with the Coalition Against Trafficking in
Women-Latin America and the Caribbean
(CATW-LAC), told IPS.
The situation in Haiti was one of the issues
discussed by representatives of NGOs, experts
and academics from throughout the region at the
Second Latin American Conference on Human
Smuggling and Trafficking, which ran Tuesday
through Friday in Puebla, 130 km south of Mexico
City.
The 7.0-magnitude quake that hit the Haitian
capital on Jan. 12 and left a death toll of at
least 220,000 forced tens of thousands of people
to live in camps...
"We have evidence of a growth in trafficking and
smuggling of persons, which is reflected in the
increase in the number of children panhandling
in the streets of Santo Domingo, for example,"
said Wooding, co-author of the 2004 book "Needed
but Not Wanted", on Haitian immigration in the
Dominican Republic.
The author was in Port-au-Prince when the quake
hit.
Even before the disaster, some 500,000 children
were not attending school in Haiti, a country of
around 9.5 million people, Guylande said.
Since 2007, there have been no convictions in
the Dominican Republic under Law 137-03 against
trafficking and smuggling, passed in 2003,
according to the U.S. State Department
Trafficking in Persons Report 2009.
As a result, the State Department reported that
the government of the Dominican Republic "does
not fully comply with the minimum standards for
the elimination of trafficking" and put the
country on its Tier 2 Watch List.
In Haiti, things are no different. Although the
government ratified the Protocol to Prevent,
Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons,
especially Women and Children, supplementing the
United Nations Convention against Transnational
Organized Crime, in force since Sept. 29, 2003,
it has failed to implement its provisions in
national laws.
"The penal system is fragile and the judiciary
is neither independent nor trustworthy, a
situation that works in favor of traffickers,"
Guylande said...
Emilio Godoy
Inter-Press
Service (IPS)
Sep. 24, 2010
Mexico
Puebla, entre los estados que más producen
pornografía infantil, informa una ONG
México ocupa el primer lugar de América Latina
en la producción y distribución de pornografía
infantil, principalmente hacia Estados Unidos,
España y países de Oriente Medio, señaló ayer
Mayra Rojas Rosas, representante de la
Organización Infancia Común, durante el Segundo
Congreso Latinoamericano sobre Trata y Tráfico
de Personas que se realiza en la Universidad
Iberoamericana.
Los estados con más casos de trata infantil,
puntualizó, son: Baja California, Sonora,
Chihuahua, Nuevo León, Guerrero, Quintana Roo,
Veracruz, Distrito Federal, Tlaxcala y Puebla.
“La gente cree que sólo son fotos o que sólo es
un video, pero eso daña y los daña para siempre
porque a veces son relaciones reales y otras
simuladas, pero esos niños están siendo
trastocados en su integridad y están siendo
sometidos a una serie de experiencias que no
tiene que sufrir un niño o un adolescente”,
declaró.
Puebla – among the states with the highest rate
of producing child pornography – NGO
Mayra Rojas Rosas, director of the
non-governmental organization Common Infancy,
declared at the Second Latin American Congress
on Human Trafficking that Mexico occupies first
place among Latin American nations in the
production and distribution of child
pornography. She noted that most of these
illicit materials are destined to be sold in the
United States, Spain and in Middle Eastern
nations.
Rojas Rosas added that the states with the
highest levels of the
production of
child pornography are Baja California, Sonora,
Chihuahua, Nuevo Leon, Guerrero, Quintana Roo,
Veracruz, the Federal District [Mexico City],
Tlaxala and Puebla. “People think that it is
only a video, but participating in child
pornography damages the lives of the victims
forever. Some of the scenes are simulated, and
some are real, but the integrity of these
children is being disrupted. They are being
subjected to a series of experiences that no
child or adolescent should have to suffer
through.
During a press conference on the subject, Rojas
Rosas lamented the fact that human trafficking
is being transformed into a business that is
larger and more easily sold than narcotics. In
response, she said, the only way to fight this
crime is through cooperation and a demand that
the problem be made ‘visible.’
“We are not talking about a problem of
persecution here. We are talking about the need
to engage in construction. We must change
legislation and generate spaces to provide for
an integral attention to the victims of
trafficking, so that they are given a chance to
develop a different type of life. The state must
assume part of the responsibility, because at
times, due to presumed acts of complicity and
omission, we have had problems,” said Rojas
Rosas.
In a separate press conference, Helen Le Goff, a
representative of the International Organization
for Migration (IOM) in Mexico, called upon
authorities to investigate and castigate
trafficking cases based upon their own sources
of information, without waiting for a formal
complaint to be filed by a victim (victim
complaint initiation is generally required by
Mexican law before a police investigation may be
carried out).
During her presentation at the Congress, Le Goff
mentioned that studies conducted by Mexico’s
National Human Rights Commission (CNDH) estimate
that each year, 20,000 persons are victims of
human trafficking, principally in tourist cities
and in frontier regions. Most victims are
illegal immigrants, who have migrated from some
13 nations, including Guatemala, Honduras and El
Salvador.
Le Goff, “In addition to the 60% of victims who
experience labor trafficking, an additional 40%
were victims of sex trafficking.”
Le Goff concluded by stating that the the IOM is
launching a campaign called “No más trata de
personas” [No more Human Trafficking] in the
cities of Ciudad Juarez and Tapachula. The
project is being developed in collaboration with
the the CNDH. The project’s goal is to educate
the public about the risks of irregular
migration and human trafficking.
Arturo Alfaro
Galán
La Jornada de
Oriente
Sep. 24, 2010
Mexico
|
 |
|
Giovanni, a nine-year-old girl who
lives in the violent Mexico City
neighborhood of Penitenciaria
Photo:Daniela Pastrana / IPS |
Gender Violence Hits Behind the News
Mexico City - Amalia is an indigenous Maya girl
from a rural community in southern Quintana Roo,
on Mexico's Caribbean coast. She is 11 years
old, and in August became the youngest mother in
the country when she gave birth to a baby girl,
51 cm long and just under three kg.
Amalia was raped when she was 10, allegedly by
her stepfather. She did not have the option of
terminating the pregnancy because by the time it
emerged that she was pregnant it was too late
for a legal abortion.
Her case highlights the government's failures in
dealing with violence against girls, a
phenomenon that is overlooked due to the many
other types of violence plaguing Mexico, such as
the epidemic of drug-related murders, and the
human rights violations attributed to the
military and police.
Amalia "represents an accumulation of social
exclusions: she is female, a child, indigenous
and poor," Juan Martín Pérez, executive director
of the Network for Children's Rights in Mexico,
which brings together more than 50 pro-child
organizations, told TerraViva.
"It took more than 20 years for me to admit what
had happened. It's something that you never
forgive; you just learn to live with it," a
35-year-old professional from Mexico City told
TerraViva. She was sexually abused by an uncle
when she was Amalia's age.
In this Latin American country of 108 million
people, there are 18.4 million boys and 17.9
million girls under 18. Violence against
children occurs in one-third of households,
despite the many institutions across the country
entrusted with protecting their well-being.
A UNICEF (United Nations
Children's Fund) study ranked Mexico second for
mistreatment of children, after Portugal,
among the 33 member countries of the
Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development (OECD). The mortality rate
attributed to this phenomenon is 30 deaths for
every million minors.
According to UNICEF, a large portion of this
physical, sexual and psychological violence and
neglect remains hidden, and is sometimes
socially accepted.
And while this crime is underreported, there is
even less information about the differences in
mistreatment based on gender. "There is a
statistical invisibility that prevents us from
getting a clear picture of the problem," said
Pérez.
Several recent studies provide isolated data for
an incomplete puzzle. For example, the latest
National Survey on Health and Nutrition reports
six pregnancies for every 1,000 girls ages 12 to
15, and 101 per 1,000 for ages 16 to 17.
In Quintana Roo, the state's secretary of
health, Juan Carlos Azueta, said that in 2009
5,500 adolescent pregnancies were reported, 16
percent of which were the result of rape -- a
proportion in line with the national average.
"I love my daughter, but I've never known how to
deal with her. She exasperates me, and I'm often
unfair to her," admitted Gloria, a mother of
three girls, whose eldest was born after she was
raped at the age of 15 by a married man.
"There is something in her that reminds me of
how I got pregnant, and nobody taught me how to
be a mother or how to deal with this memory
inside," said the abusive mother, who lives in
Atizapán, on the outskirts of Mexico City.
"La infancia cuenta" (Childhood Counts / 2009),
a web-based monitoring tool and publication by
the Network for Children's Rights in Mexico
dedicated to girls, states "there are specific
groups of females who are marginalized from the
educational system," such as adolescent mothers
or disabled or indigenous girls and adolescents.
According to Mexico's National Institute on
Statistics and Geography, 180,500 adolescent
mothers, ages 12 to 18, have not completed their
basic education. Girls have higher school
attendance rates than boys until age 16, when
the balance starts to tip, in part due to early
pregnancy.
"At 15, I ran away from home with the man who is
now the father of my children, but things went
even worse for me," Citatli, now 45 and a
grandmother, told TerraViva. She lives in a
low-income neighborhood in the eastern part of
the Mexico City metropolitan area.
She had two children by the time she was 17,
"and the younger one was born prematurely after
I was beaten," she said. "I have always been
surrounded by violence. From my mother, my
brothers, my first husband, and now from my
children." Her only hope is that her five
grandchildren "don't turn out like that."
In Mexico, violent acts against girls,
adolescents and women are based on a social
construction that assumes males are superior,
several sources consulted by TerraViva agreed.
"We've made some limited progress, with a
federal law (against gender violence) and local
laws in all states, but we haven't seen
fundamental changes," said Axela Romero,
director of Integral Health for Women. "A
culture in which masculine is put above feminine
prevails."
Giovanni, a nine-year-old girl who lives in the
violent Mexico City neighborhood of
Penitenciaria, knows all about that. She has
what is traditionally a boy's name because when
her mother was about to give birth to her
firstborn son, she lost the pregnancy due to "a
fright" when the father got involved in a fight.
So the name went to the little girl, when she
was born.
"I hate violence, and I hate it even more when
the men drink," Giovanni told TerraViva.
Years of gruesome unsolved murders of women --
known as "femicides" -- put Ciudad Juárez, on
Mexico's northern border, on the global map. At
least 800 women have been tortured and murdered
in the last 16 years, according to incomplete
official data.
Meanwhile, in some Mexican states, the laws are
tougher on women who undergo abortions than on
the rapists who impregnated them.
According to government surveys, more than 60
percent of male adolescents believe it is solely
the responsibility of the woman to take
precautions against pregnancy, and at least
one-fifth of students have witnessed incidents
at their schools, off in a corner, where one or
more boys inappropriately touched a girl without
her consent.
But those incidents, like other forms of
aggression against girls, are likewise abandoned
in a corner.
*This story was
originally published by IPS TerraViva with the
support of UNIFEM and the Dutch MDG3 Fund.
Daniela Pastrana
Inter Press
Service (IPS) / TerraViva
Sep. 21, 2010
Mexico
Bicentennial Nothing to Celebrate, Say
Indigenous Peoples
Mexico City - "I don't understand why we should
celebrate [Independence]. There will be no
freedom in Mexico until repression against
indigenous peoples is eliminated," says Sadhana,
whose name means "moon" in the indigenous
Mazahua language.
Over the course of the year, the Mexican
government has organized a series of lavish
celebrations to mark the 200th anniversary of
the start of the war of independence against the
Spanish Empire, Sep. 16, 1810. The main events,
held Sep. 15, included a military parade with
soldiers from several other countries and a
fireworks display.
But to many of Mexico's indigenous peoples, the
festivities are an alien concept.
According to indigenous organizations, at least
a third of Mexico's 108 million people are of
native descent. But the government's National
Council on Population says the majority of
Mexicans are mestizo (of mixed European and
indigenous ancestry), while 14 million belong to
one of the country's 62 native groups.
"There is no birth certificate or other official
document that says we are indigenous. The
official calculations are based on the census
that asks just one question about this: if you
speak an indigenous language. That is the only
element they use to define who is indigenous,"
said Julio Atenco Vidal, of the Regional
Coordinator of Sierra de Zongolica Indigenous
Organisations, in the southeastern state of
Veracruz.
"Furthermore, there are many who say they are
not indigenous, because it is associated with
backwardness," he told IPS.
Registered by her Mazahua parents with the name
"Daleth Ignacio Esquivel," Sadhana, 14,
participates in a dance group of Mexica origin.
They promote the recovery of their ancestral
language among youths in San Miguel, a town in
the central state of Mexico.
In the latest census of population and housing,
conducted in May and June, the question about
personal ethnic identification was added...
Of all the segments of the population,
indigenous women have the worst living
conditions, according to the National Commission
for the Development of Indigenous Peoples. These
women suffer serious health problems resulting
from nutritional deficiencies and high birth
rates.
From childhood, indigenous girls are obligated
to help their mothers. They tend to marry
between ages 13 and 16. And their "normal"
workday can last 18 hours daily.
Meanwhile, illiteracy among indigenous children
is five times greater than among mestizo
children.
An extreme case of indigenous exclusion is found
in San Juan Copala, in the southern state of
Oaxaca, home of the Triqui community, which
declared itself "autonomous" in 2007. The Triqui
people have been under siege since January by
illegal armed groups that block the entry of
food and medicine, and teachers. Governmental
authorities have yet to intervene.
The ongoing harassment has led to at least a
dozen deaths since 2007 and earned a
denunciation from the United Nations Office of
the High Commissioner of Human Rights. In April,
the armed groups ambushed an international
humanitarian convoy that was attempting to bring
supplies to the Triqui village.
"We are celebrating the
construction of a type of stratified and racist
state, which is what has been created in Mexico,
often based on liberal ideas," said Rodolfo
Stavenhagen, a researcher at the Colegio de
México and former UN special rapporteur on the
situation of the human rights and fundamental
freedoms of indigenous peoples.
"Now is a good time to reform the concept of
'nation'. We must take steps in building an
indigenous citizenry and indigenous spaces that
have never before appeared in Mexico's
institutional fabric," Stavenhagen told IPS.
Along similar lines, 177 organizations from 15
states are working to breathe new life into the
indigenous movement. It has been largely
stagnant since 2001, when the government quashed
the efforts towards autonomy by the indigenous
Zapatista National Liberation Army, which took
up arms in January 1994 in the southern state of
Chiapas.
Now, in a new national and international
context, the organizations are pursuing a model
of a "plurinational" and "pluricultural" state,
one that includes Mexico's array of indigenous
ethnicities "without adulteration or
compromise."
"We don't have anything to celebrate," reads a
declaration from the National Indigenous
Movement, which met in the capital on Sep. 15
while the rest of the country commemorated 200
years of the Mexican republic.
The movement questioned "the irrational festive
nature of the great national celebration," on
which the government spent 200 million dollars,
"while our peoples are fighting hunger and
desperation."
Daniela Pastrana
Inter-Press
Service (IPS)
Sep. 24, 2010
Mexico
IOM
- Co-organizer and Participant in the Second
Latin-American Congress on Migrant Smuggling and
Human Trafficking
The [United Nations affiliated] International
Organization for Migration (IOM) is
participating in the second Latin American
Congress on Migrant Smuggling and Human
Trafficking, taking place this week in Puebla,
Mexico.
The four-day event co-organized by IOM which
ends today, brings together hundreds of
government officials, experts from international
organizations, researchers, civil society and
students, as well as the general public, to
discuss issues of common concern related to
migrant smuggling and human trafficking in
Latin-America.
More than 250 international experts are
presenting their counter-trafficking work and
shared experiences, with the more than 350
participants from every country in the
hemisphere.
The main objective of the Congress is to promote
active discussion amongst key actors combating
human trafficking in Latin America, in order to
encourage the development of public policies and
legislation against trafficking in the region.
IOM Mexico, as a member of the Latin-American
Committee of the Congress, has been coordinating
as well as organizing the event. IOM experts
from Mexico, Costa Rica and Nicaragua have
participated in different panels, presenting IOM
activities in the region as well as discussing
the link between migration and human trafficking
and the need for protection of the human rights
of all migrants.
In Latin America, human trafficking for sexual
and labor exploitation has reached alarming
proportions in recent years. Since 2000, when
the Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish
Trafficking in Persons was approved, many Latin
American countries have updated or drafted anti
human trafficking laws and have put in place
public policies aimed at combating the crime and
providing vital protection to the victims.
Organized criminal networks earn billions of
dollars each year from the traffic and
exploitation of persons who suffer severe
violations of their human rights. Common abuses
experienced by trafficking victims include rape,
torture, debt bondage, unlawful confinement, and
threats against their family or other persons
close to them, as well as other forms of
physical, sexual and psychological violence.
According to Mexico’s National Human Rights
Commission (CNDH by its Spanish acronym), with
whom IOM Mexico has recently signed a
cooperation agreement, each year more than
20,000 persons fall victim to human trafficking
in Mexico, mainly in border areas and in tourist
destinations.
"Data on human trafficking in Mexico is rare and
there are only estimations on this serious
problem," said Thomas Lothar Weiss, IOM Chief of
Mission in Mexico.
"What we know is that Chiapas and Chihuahua,
where IOM has sub-offices, are two of the main
states of origin and destination of trafficking
in Mexico. One of the worst forms of trafficking
detected recently in Mexico is linked with the
kidnapping of people for recruitment in the
organized criminal groups," Weiss added...
Hélène Le Goff
International
Organization for Migration (IOM) México
Sep. 24, 2010
Texas, USA
Chase leads deputies to possible human
trafficking ring
San Antonio - A chase led Bexar County deputies
to a home they say may be part of human
trafficking ring.
Deputies chased a stolen truck to a home in the
11,000 block of Jarrett Road in Far Southwest
Bexar County around 11:00 a.m. Friday. The
deputies found 17 illegal immigrants living
inside the home in horrible conditions.
Investigators believe the illegal immigrants
were smuggled here and stayed cramped up inside
the small home, sleeping wherever they could
find space.
"The living conditions are pretty bad," said
Sgt. R. Fletcher of the Bexar County Sheriff's
Department. "And we're talking about 15 to 17
people in a 3 bedroom home..."
WOAI
Sep. 24, 2010
Canada
Woman faces first such Manitoba charge; Victim
forced into prostitution, police say
Manitoba's first-ever human trafficking charge
has been laid after an older woman befriended a
21-year-old woman from northern Manitoba, then
allegedly forced her into the sex trade.
The 38-year-old is accused of taking the
victim's identification and clothing, punching
her in a fight and stopping her twice as she
attempted to run away, Winnipeg police said
Thursday.
The pair lived in a home in the 300 block of
Aikens Street. The older woman forced the girl
to turn over the cash she made to pay for food
and a roof over her head, investigators believe.
The Winnipeg Police Service vice unit began
probing the case after officers were initially
called to the home on a complaint of a fight
Monday.
The woman was arrested Wednesday.
"The best way to describe it is we have an
individual whose human rights have been violated
to an extreme," said WPS spokesman Const. Jason
Michalyshen, noting investigators believe the
abuse started earlier this month.
"It's certainly not something we come across on
a regular basis."
The Criminal Code added a specific section
against human trafficking in 2005.
The Criminal Code describes a trafficker in
human beings as "a person (who) exploits another
person if they cause the victim to provide
labour or service for fear of their safety or
the safety of someone known to them."
...A source said the victim is from a remote
First Nations [indigenous] community and lived
in two city shelters before moving in with the
older woman...
Theresa Peebles is charged with forcible
confinement, assault and three counts of
trafficking. All charges date from Sept. 5 to
Sept. 20 this year...
"These types of charges are difficult to lay.
There's a lot of criteria that need to be
established, and because it is fairly new
legislation, fairly new law, members of the
policing community are still learning and being
educated about it," Michalyshen said.
Gabrielle Giroday
The Winnipeg Free
Press
Sep. 24, 2010
Added: Sep. 24, 2010
Mexico, Latin America
|
 |
|
Marcela
Lagarde
y de los Ríos
- president
of Mexico's Network for Women’s Life and
Liberty, speaks at the Second Latin
American Congress on Human Trafficking |
Mujeres
con derechos y ciudadanía, debe exigir la sociedad
Plantea Marcela
Lagarde en Congreso sobre Trata y Tráfico
El delito de trata de
personas no sólo debe ser visto como un hecho del
crimen organizado, sino como resultado de una
complejidad social apabullante, que abarca a la
sociedad y al Estado, y que éste último no se ha
reformado para hacer frente a sus obligaciones
legales, afirmó aquí la feminista Marcela Lagarde y
de los Ríos.
Ante los comités de
organización y académico del II Congreso
Latinoamericano sobre Trata y Tráfico de Personas:
Migración, Género y Derechos Humanos, se pronunció
por recurrir a los aportes teóricos de la
investigación de la perspectiva de género, para
definir y diferenciar los límites precisos sobre los
riesgos de ser objeto de trata, que corren las
mujeres y las niñas, por edad, clase social,
etnicidad, condiciones de migración, de legalidad e
ilegalidad...
Women,
with our rights of citizenship, must make demands
upon society
Feminist activist Marcela Lagarde addresses the
Second Latin American Congress on Human Trafficking
In her presentation
before the Second Latin American Congress on Human
Trafficking, feminist activist Marcela Lagarde y de
los Ríos stated that human trafficking should not be
seen only as an act perpetrated by organized crime,
but also as a overwhelmingly powerful social complex
that envelops our society and the state. In
response, she said, government has not reformed
itself to accept its legal obligations in this area.
During her presentation:
Human Rights Synergies for Women in Response to
Human Trafficking, Lagarde, who is the president of
the Network for Women’s Life and Liberty (in
Mexico), went on to discuss the fact that
investigating human trafficking from a gender
perspective requires that we understand the risks
that women and girls face upon becoming victims of
trafficking, because of their gender, social class,
ethnicity and their legal or illegal condition of
migration.
Lagarde explained that
when, for example, the topic of immigrants is
discussed, the term “inmigrantes”
(immigrants), not “las
migrantes” (women immigrants) is used.
Linguistically, Lagarde
declared, this imposes a brutal form of
discrimination when the topic of human
trafficking is discussed. When the term “personas”
(persons) is used in the context of our patriarchal
discourse, the term means, specifically, men.
Thus, the term
‘trafficking in persons’ is never translated to mean
that the human slavery of women and girls exists.
Female victims are almost never mentioned in the
context of human trafficking [in Mexico]. This
omission contributes to their invisibility.
Lagarde went on to say
that, if we approach the problem of human
trafficking without using a gender-based
perspective, we cannot arrive at a point where we
understand that this problem “is closely associated
with the [intentional] domination and dehumanization
of women.”
These factors cause
society to focus its solutions to trafficking on
targeting organized crime, while at the same time
failing to work toward equality between men and
women and a respect for the sexual and reproductive
rights of girls and adolescents, said Lagarde...
Elizabeth Muñoz
Vásquez
The CIMAC Women's
News Agency
Sep. 22, 2010
Mexico, Latin America
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Ibero-American University rector David
Fernández Dávalos, shown at another
university event - spoke at the opening
ceremonies of the Second Latin American
Congress on Human Trafficking |
Erradicar la trata no “le importa a nadie”:
Fernández Dávalos
Encuentro
Latinoamericano sobre Trata y Tráfico de Personas
Cada año, cerca de 100
mil mujeres provenientes de países de América Latina
y el Caribe, son llevadas con engaños y falsas
promesas de empleo, a diversas naciones del mundo,
sin que se conozcan las cifras nacionales oficiales,
estudios, las estadísticas, ni los informes
cuantitativos que permitan evidenciar el fenómeno de
la trata de personas.
Al inaugurar aquí el
Segundo Encuentro Latinoamericano sobre Trata y
Tráfico de Personas: Migración, Género y Derechos
Humanos, el rector de la Universidad Iberoamericana,
Puebla, David Fernández Dávalos, lamentó que este
problema no le importe a nadie, “ni a la academia,
ni a los gobernantes, ni a gran parte de la sociedad
civil”.
En el mundo, dijo, más
de 4 millones de personas son víctimas del delito de
trata y de esa cifra, el 80 por ciento es sufrida
por mujeres, niños y niñas en sus diversas formas de
explotación sexual.
Desafortunadamente,
continuó, a la trata con fines de explotación sexual
y laboral, la adopción ilegal, el comercio de
órganos y el tráfico de droga, se suma la venta de
niñas y adolescentes en comunidades indígenas de
México, los abusos en el servicio doméstico, los
matrimonios serviles y la violencia familiar, son
validadas por sistemas patriarcales, machistas y
conservadores, que limitan la problemática y la
reducen...
Ibero-American University rector David Fernández
Dávalos: "Nobody cares about eradicating human
trafficking"
Each year, close to
100,000 Latin American and Caribbean women are
taken, through the use of offers of work and other
false promises, to nations around the world. We do
not know the real numbers of victims. Neither
official national estimates nor quantitative studies
can really tell us the true scope of human
trafficking.
During the opening
ceremonies of the Second Latin American Congress on
Human Trafficking, which is being held on the campus
of the Ibero-American University in the city of
Puebla, in Puebla state, university rector David
Fernández Dávalos lamented that nobody cares about
human trafficking, "neither academia, nor those in
government, nor the great majority of civil
society."
Fernández Dávalos noted
that globally, some 4 million persons are victims of
human trafficking. Of these, 80% are women and
children who suffer through diverse forms of sexual
exploitation.
Unfortunately, added
Fernández Dávalos, in addition to the traditional
categories of sex and labor trafficking, illegal
adoptions, organ trafficking and drug trafficking,
we must also add the sale of children and youth in
the indigenous communities of Mexico [they are 30%
of the national population], abuses found in
domestic service, servile marriages and family
violence. These problems are all validated by [our]
conservative and machista [machismo-based]
patriarchal systems, which work to diminish
action to respond to the problem.
Fernández Dávalos
presented figures compiled by the Civil Guard of
Spain which indicate that 70% of the female victims
of human trafficking in that nation come originally
from Latin America, while in Japan, an estimated
1,700 Latin America women are held as sex slaves.
Fernández Dávalos
declared that public strategies must be created to
address human trafficking in each region of Latin
America. Today efforts at prevention, protection and
prosecution are inadequate.
Oscar Arturo Castro, who
is the director of the Ignacio Ellacuria Human
Rights Center at the university as well as member of
the organizing committee of the Congress, argued
that the dynamics of migration must be studied as
part of the problem of human slavery. Castro,
"because organized crime is taking advantage of
human mobility."
Castro, "[Organized
crime] exploits migration driven by greed, and
disregards human dignity, a reality that we can
observe in the example of the recent massacre of 72
Central American migrants in Tamaulipas, as well as
in the cases of the thousands of Central [and South]
American migrants who are kidnapped by drug
trafficking gangs across the entire territory of
Mexico."
The opening ceremonies
of the Congress were also attended by José Manuel
Grima, president of the Congress and Teresa Ulloa
Ziaurríz, director of the Coalition Against the
Trafficking Women and Girls - Latin American and
Caribbean branch. Some 300 presenters are expected
during the 4 days of planned conference sessions.
Elizabeth Muñoz
Vásquez
The CIMAC Women's
News Agency
Sep. 21, 2010
Latin America
América
Latina ineficaz en combate a trata de personas
Puebla city in Puebla state, Mexico - El combate a
la trata de personas ha sido ineficaz y ha derivado
en la creación de mercados intrarregionales, según
especialistas y activistas de América Latina
reunidos desde este martes en esta ciudad mexicana.
"El combate ha terminado en respuestas más formales
que reales, como los cambios legales. No hay interés
de los estados, no es una prioridad", criticó a IPS
Ana Hidalgo, de la oficina en Costa Rica de la
Organización Internacional para las Migraciones
(OIM), la institución intergubernamental que
promueve una migración ordenada y justa.
Hidalgo forma parte de los 450 académicos y
activistas que participan en Puebla, a 129
kilómetros al sur de Ciudad de México, en el Segundo
Congreso Latinoamericano sobre Trata y Tráfico de
Personas, inaugurado este martes y que concluirá
este viernes 24.
"Se atiende a una víctima y se inicia un proceso
penal, pero no hay sentencia porque hay impunidad.
El consumidor, léase el prostituyente o el violador,
no está captado en la fórmula", señaló la abogada
Ana Chávez, del Servicio Paz y Justicia de
Argentina.
En México cada año unas 20.000 personas serían
víctimas de la trata, según el no gubernamental
Centro de Estudios e Investigación en Desarrollo y
Asistencia Social (CEIDAS), uno de cuyos ejes es el
estudio de ese fenómeno.
En América Latina esa cifra es de 250.000 personas,
con una ganancia de 1.350 millones de dólares para
las bandas, según estadísticas de la mexicana
Secretaría (ministerio) de Seguridad Pública. Pero
los datos sobre el fenómeno son variables, si bien
las Naciones Unidas subraya que el delito se ha
exacerbado en el comienzo del siglo...
Inter Press Service
(IPS) / TerraViva
Sep. 21, 2010
English Language Version:
Latin
America: Five Million Women Have Fallen Prey to
Trafficking Networks
The fight against human
trafficking in Latin America is ineffective and has
led to the emergence of intra-regional markets for
the trade, according to experts and activists
meeting this week in this Mexican city.
'Responses to the trade
in human beings have been more formal than real, as
have the changes in legislation. Governments are not
interested: it is not their priority,' Ana Hidalgo,
from the Costa Rican office of the International
Organization for Migration (IOM), told IPS.
Hidalgo is one of the
450 academics and activists taking part in the
Second Latin American Conference on Smuggling and
Trafficking of Human Beings, under the theme
'Migrations, Gender and Human Rights', Sept. 21-24
in Puebla, 129 kilometers south of Mexico City.
Ana Chávez, a lawyer
with Argentina's Peace and Justice Service (SERPAJ)
said, 'Victims are listened to, and criminal
prosecutions are initiated, but no one is sentenced
because of impunity. The consumers, that is, the
pimps, clients or rapists, do not come into the
equation.'
In Mexico some 20,000
people a year fall victim to the modern-day slave
trade, according to the Centre for Studies and
Research on Social Development and Assistance
(CEIDAS), which monitors the issue.
The total number of
victims in Latin America amounts to 250,000 a year,
yielding a profit of 1.35 billion dollars for the
traffickers, according to statistics from the
Mexican Ministry of Public Security. But the data
vary widely. Whatever the case, the United Nations
warns that human trafficking has steadily grown over
the past decade.
Organizations like the
Coalition Against Trafficking of Women and Girls in
Latin America and the Caribbean (CATW-LAC) estimate
that over five million girls and women have been
trapped by these criminal networks in the region,
and another 10 million are in danger of falling into
their hands...
Latin America is a
source and destination region for human trafficking,
a crime that especially affects the Dominican
Republic, Brazil and Colombia.
The conference host,
David Fernández Dávalos, president of the
Ibero-American University of Puebla (UIA-Puebla),
said in his inaugural speech that human trafficking
is a modern and particularly malignant version of
slavery, only under better cover and disguises.
On Aug. 31, U.N.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon urged member states to
implement a Global Plan of Action to Combat
Trafficking in Persons, because it is 'among the
worst human rights violations,' constituting
'slavery in the modern age,' and preying mostly on
'women and children.'
The congress coincides
with the International Day Against the Sexual
Exploitation and Trafficking of Women and Children
on Thursday, instituted in 1999 by the World
Conference of the Coalition Against Trafficking in
Women (CATW).
Government authorities
and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in Mexico
concur that criminal mafias in this country have
been proved to combine trafficking in persons with
drug trafficking, along both the northern and
southern land borders (with the United States and
with Guatemala, respectively)...
In Mexico, a federal Law
to Prevent and Punish Trafficking in Persons has
been on the books since 2007, but the government has
yet to create a national program to implement it,
although this is stipulated in the law itself.
The Puebla Congress,
which follows the first such conference held in
Buenos Aires in 2008, is meeting one month after the
massacre of 72 undocumented migrants in the
northeastern state of Tamaulipas, which exemplified
the connection between drug trafficking and
trafficking in persons, and drew International
attention to the dangers faced by migrants in
Mexico.
Miguel Ortega, a member
of the Democratic Alliance of Civil Society
Organizations, a Mexican umbrella group representing
50 NGOs, told IPS: 'In first place, the problem is
invisible, and until the state makes appropriate
changes to the laws, there will be no progress. We
want to see prompt and decisive action.'
IOM's Hidalgo said, 'our
investigations and research have found that
Nicaraguan women are trafficked into Guatemala and
Costa Rica, and Honduran women are trafficked into
Guatemala and Mexico.'
Women from Colombia and
Peru have been forced into prostitution in the
southern Ecuadorean province of El Oro, according to
a two-year investigation by Martha Ruiz, a
consultant responsible for updating and redrafting
Ecuador's National Plan against Human Trafficking.
SERPAJ's Chávez said,
'We have not been able to get governments to take
responsibility for investigating these crimes. The
states themselves are a factor in generating these
crimes.'
Out of the 32 Mexican
states, eight make no reference to human trafficking
in their state laws. Mario Fuentes, head of CEIDAS,
wrote this week in the newspaper Excélsior that the
country is laboring under 'severe backwardness and
challenges in this field, because it lacks a
national program to deal with the problem, as well
as a system of statistics.'
Emilio Godoy
Inter Press Service
(IPS)
Sep. 22, 2010
Mexico
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Democratic U.S. Senator
Patrick Leahy of Vermont has insisted
upon linking U.S. aid to human rights
improvements in Mexico |
Rights
groups against giving US anti-drug aid to Mexico
Human rights
groups Tuesday urged US lawmakers not to authorize
36 million dollars in anti-drug trafficking aid to
Mexico because of human rights violations by its
security forces.
Mexico City - Human
rights groups Tuesday urged US lawmakers not to
authorize 36 million dollars in anti-drug
trafficking aid to Mexico because of human rights
violations by its security forces.
"Releasing these funds
would send the message that the United States
condones the grave human rights violations committed
in Mexico, including torture, rape, killings, and
enforced disappearances," they said in a letter to
the Senate.
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