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UN raises concerns over Mexico's 'alarming' numbers of missing persons

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UN raises concerns over Mexico's 'alarming' numbers of missing persons.
UN raises concerns over Mexico's 'alarming' numbers of missing persons.
David Prado
  • In Mexico, 111 896 people are currently registered as missing in the interior ministry's official database.
  • This number does not include the many more people who went missing and were later found dead.
  • The UN committee also urged the government to ensure transparency of the methodology used to update the database.


The UN Committee on Enforced Disappearances on Tuesday raised concerns over what it called an inadequate investigation of the "alarming" number of disappearances in Mexico, its consequential low convictions, and "almost absolute impunity".

In Mexico, 111 896 people are currently registered as missing in the interior ministry's official database.

This number does not include the many more people who went missing and were later found dead.

Most had disappeared since 2006, when then-President Felipe Calderon declared a "war on drugs," mobilising the armed forces to fight the increasingly powerful cartels and unleashing a wave of violence that continues to rock the country.

In late July, Mexican president Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador revised the government database, suggesting that the real number of disappeared is lower.

The president's comments raised alarm. Experts and even some government officials have instead said the numbers are likely much higher as families often do not report disappearances - either for fear of reprisals or because they doubt the ability of the authorities to do anything for them.

READ | Gqeberha police seek missing girl (13)

The UN committee also urged the government to ensure transparency of the methodology used to update the database. So far, no details about possible changes have been made public.

The interior ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Changes to the database should involve groups representing victims and be independently and impartially coordinated by the National Search Commission, the committee said, while also including measures to avoid re-victimisation and protect data.

Reuters spent four years documenting the work of independently formed search groups across 10 Mexican states.

Around 180 such groups have sprung up. Mayra Gonzalez, whose sister went missing in 2016 and was later found murdered, is one such activist. 

"It's important that the cases are made visible," she said.


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