Thousands march for the 130,000 missing

Will be a grantMexican correspondent And
Chris GrahamBBC News
ReutersThousands of people organized protests in Mexico to emphasize the forced disappearance of the country and demand more action by the authorities.
Relatives and friends and human rights activists of missing people, Mexico City, Guadalajara, Córdoba and other cities walked and called for justice, and President Claudia Sheinbaum invited the government to help find his loved ones.
More than 130,000 people were reported in Mexico. Almost all disappearances have taken place since 2007, when President Felipe Calderón initiated the “Drug War”.
In many cases, those who disappear were forcibly hired to drug cartels- or killed to resist.
Although drug cartels and organized crime groups are the main perpetrators, the security forces are responsible for death and disappearances.
The extent to what extent the problem of cities, states and municipalities where demonstrations have been performed has affected communities and families in Mexico.
From one end of the country to the other – from the southern states, such as Sonora and Durango, such as Oaxaca – activists and family members of the activists and family members demanded the authorities to do more to address the issue, carrying their relatives with their relatives in thousands of pensions.
ReutersThe walk at Mexico City brought the traffic in the capital to stop while the protest went down the main street.
Many affected families have established search teams known as “Buscadores”, which usually cleanses the rural areas and the deserts of Northern Mexico, following the circuits of the cartels.
Buscadores carries out searches and activisms at great personal risk. After the last discovery in Jalisco province of Jalisco, many of the relevant Buscadores disappeared.
The State Chief Public Prosecutor’s Office later concluded that there was no evidence of a crematorium on the field.
The United Nations called it a “tremendous human tragedy”.
Mexico is experiencing a disappearance that exceeds Latin America’s worst transitions.
About 40,000 disappeared during Guatemala’s 36 -year civil war, which ended in 1996. Between 1976 and 1983, the estimated 30,000 disappeared in Argentina under military rule.





