Mexico: Ten years of intolerable crimes against women must end now, Amnesty says



News Release Issued by the International Secretariat of Amnesty International
AI INDEX: AMR 41/033/2003     11 August 2003 

Mexico: Ten years of intolerable crimes against women in Ciudad Juárez and
Chihuahua must end now


(Mexico City) The failure to address ten years of killings and abductions
of women in the state of Chihuahua casts doubt on the capacity of the
Mexican government to turn its rhetoric on human rights into reality, said
Irene Khan, Secretary General of Amnesty International.

During her first visit to Mexico -- where she will meet President Vicente
Fox, other ministers from his administration, political party leaders and
representatives from civil society -- Irene Khan will lobby for more
effective intervention by the federal authorities to investigate this
brutal pattern of violence against women in Ciudad Juárez and Chihuahua
and to bring to justice those responsible.

"The pervasive failure of the authorities to address these cases is
tantamount to tolerance of them," stated Ms Khan as she launched a report:
Mexico: Intolerable killings, Ten years of abductions and murders in
Ciudad Juárez and Chihuahua after a visit to Ciudad Juárez where she met
mothers of missing and murdered women (view the report online at
http://amnesty-news.c.tclk.net/maabkWNaaZKsmbd5AQwb/ ).

According to official figures 70 women remain missing in Ciudad Juárez,
and more recently in the city of Chihuahua. Information from other sources
puts this figure at 400 women missing since 1993. Their families fear the
worst, given the alarming number of missing women who have subsequently
been found murdered days, or even years, later.

Amnesty International's investigation found that in the last ten years
approximately 370 women have been murdered, of which at least 137 were
sexually assaulted prior to their death. A further 75 bodies have still
not been identified -- it is thought some may be those of women who have
been reported missing but grossly inadequate forensic investigations have
made this impossible to confirm.

Many of the women were abducted, held captive for several days and
subjected to humiliation, torture and the most horrific sexual violence
before dying, most as a result of asphyxiation caused by strangulation or
from being beaten. Their bodies have then been found hidden among rubble
or abandoned in desert areas near the city.

A significant number of the missing or murdered women were employed in
assembly plants known as maquiladoras. Waitresses, students or women
working in the informal economy have also been targeted by the assailants.
In short, young women with no power in society, some with children to
support and from poor backgrounds, whose deaths have no political cost for
the local authorities.

"For many of the women who migrate to find work in Ciudad Juárez and
Chihuahua, the pervasive pattern of violence against women has turned
their dream of finding new opportunities into a nightmare," Ms Khan
stated.

"It is shameful that in the first few years after the abductions and
murders began, the authorities displayed open discrimination towards the
women and their families in their public statements. On more than one
occasion the women themselves were blamed for their own abduction or
murder because of the way they dressed or because they worked in bars at
night."

Amnesty International's report states: "The failure of the competent
authorities to take action to investigate these crimes, whether through
indifference, lack of will, negligence or inability, has been blatant over
the last ten years." The organization has documented unjustifiable delays
in the initial efforts to locate the missing women, a failure to follow up
crucial evidence and witness statements, and the fabrication of evidence
and use of torture against detained suspects. In other cases, the forensic
examinations carried out have been inadequate, with contradictory and
incorrect information being given to families about the identity of
bodies, thereby causing further distress to them and disrupting their
grieving process.

"The suffering of the families of these women has been intensified again
and again -- not only have the authorities ignored their demands that a
formal criminal investigation be opened from the first day on which a
woman is reported missing, the families' demands for justice have fallen
on deaf ears," Ms Khan stated.

"The real protagonists of this tragedy are the families of these women who
have single-handedly fought for justice in the face of hostility,"
continued Ms Khan referring to the threats and intimidation that
relatives, lawyers and members of NGOs have been subjected to.
Highlighting how the state authorities have consistently sought to
delegitimise the families and their struggle, she also called on the
authorities to respect their dignity and their right to be involved
actively in the investigative process.

The state authorities claim that most of the murders have been "solved".
Although, according to their figures, 79 people have been convicted, in
the vast majority of cases justice has not been done. Furthermore, the
quality of the investigations and allegations of torture of suspects held
in connection with the killings, cast doubt on the integrity of the
criminal proceedings brought against many of those arrested in connection
with these crimes. Meanwhile, year after year the crimes continue.

"The cases of Ciudad Juárez and Chihuahua are symptomatic of the failings
of the administration of justice nationwide," said Ms Khan.

There is an urgent need for a profound structural reform of the justice
system so that its investigative procedures and capabilities will provide
full access to justice for the victims and a fair trial for the accused.
The human rights "Diagnostic" being carried out in the context of the
Technical Cooperation Agreement provides a golden opportunity to address
these underlying structural problems. The Agreement signed between the
government and the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights
draws on the insights of national civil society and the recommendations of
international human rights bodies.

"The Diagnostic process and the Human Rights Program which will flow from
it demand unequivocal public support from the federal authorities at the
highest level,"  stated Ms Khan. "The ability to address cases such as the
killings in Juárez will be a benchmark of the effectiveness of this
process of reform."

Ms Khan welcomed promising developments such as the recent creation of an
inter- institutional sub-commission, under the auspices of the Secretaría
de Gobernacion (Ministry of the Interior) to look specifically into the
Juárez cases, but she cautioned: "These positive steps have to be seen in
the light of ten years of empty promises and the continuing failure to
involve relatives of the victims in these initiatives. Ten years of
intolerable crimes must end now."

"President Fox and his government have committed themselves to promoting
the protection of human rights at all levels -- inside and outside the
country. The cases of these murdered and missing women in Ciudad Juárez
and Chihuahua contain many of the elements that undermine the credibility
of these commitments."

"The full implementation of the measures recommended by Amnesty
International and other organizations will be the clearest sign that these
killings and abductions are not tolerated by the authorities," concluded
Ms Khan.


Background

The first cases of abduction and killing of women and girls exhibiting a
similar pattern were reported in Ciudad Juárez ten years ago. Located in
the desert on the border with the United States, it is now the most
heavily-populated city in Chihuahua state. Its geographical position has
turned it into fertile territory for drug trafficking and other organized
crime, which has led to high levels of violence and public insecurity. The
establishment of the maquiladoras, whose profitability is largely derived
from the hiring of very cheap local labour, has attracted large numbers of
migrant workers from other parts of Mexico. Many of them are women living
and working in precarious circumstances which leave them at even greater
risk of gender-based violence.

Take action:
http://amnesty-news.c.tclk.net/maabkWNaaZKMrbd5AQwb/



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Mexico: Intolerable Killings: Ten years of abductions and murders in Ciudad Juárez 
and Chihuahua. Read the report online
in Spanish at http://amnesty-news.c.tclk.net/maabkWNaaZKsnbd5AQwb/
in English at http://amnesty-news.c.tclk.net/maabkWNaaZKsobd5AQwb/

View all documents on Mexico at http://amnesty-news.c.tclk.net/maabkWNaaZKspbd5AQwb/

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