Mexican mum who investigated daughter's death is killed
In 10 years, the
so-called war on drugs he launched left tens of thousands of murder victims
with numbers varying widely between civic institutions and government figures. The
International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) issued its annual survey
of armed conflict on Tuesday, saying that 23,000 people had died in Mexico in
armed conflict in 2016
Miriam Rodriguez
Martinez was shot in her home in the town of San Fernando in Tamaulipas state. She
was known for successfully investigating the kidnap and murder of her daughter
by a local drug cartel, the Zetas. The information she gave the police ensured
the gang members were jailed.
But in March one of
them escaped and her colleagues said she started to receive threats. Her
colleagues said she had asked for police protection but was ignored. The
Mexican human rights commission issued a statement saying it deplored her
murder and called for a full investigation.
Mrs Rodriguez founded
the local collective in her town for families who were victims of violence
after her daughter was kidnapped in 2012. She had managed to find her
daughter's body in a clandestine grave and put her murderers in jail. She also
foiled an attempted kidnapping by the Zetas of her husband, when she chased the
gang in her car, at the same time notifying the army who then managed to arrest
them.
The group she
established was part of a wider trend which mushroomed after the October 2014
disappearance of 43 rural student teachers studying at Ayotzinapa in the
southwestern state of Guerrero. Frustrated by a lack of government help, groups
of families began their own searches for people who had disappeared in their
areas, taking courses in forensic anthropology, archaeology, law, buying caving
equipment and becoming experts in identifying graves and bones. There are now at least
13 of these groups across the country… read more:
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-39892553