Will give grantMexico correspondent And
Chris GrahamBBC News
Thousands of people have protested in Mexico to highlight the disappearance of many of the country’s applicable disappearance and to deal with them more action by authorities.
Along with relatives and friends of the missing people, human rights activists asked to do justice to the streets of Mexico City, Gueljara, Cordoba and other cities and urged President Claudia Shinbam’s government to help find their missing loved ones.
More than 130,000 people have been reported missing in Mexico. Almost all have disappeared since 2007, when the then President Felip Calderone launched his “drugs on drugs”.
In many cases, the missing people have been forcibly admitted to drug cartel – or murdered for protest.
While drug cartel and organized crime group are the main criminals, security forces are also convicted for death and disappearance.
While the extensive spread of cities, states and municipalities was held, it was clarified that the problem of forced disappearance affects communities and families in Mexico.
From one end of the country to another – from the southern states to the northern such as Sonora and Durango – activists and family members, along with thousands of their relatives, came out in the placard carrying thousands of their relatives, so that the authorities could be demanded to address the issue.
In Mexico City, March brought traffic into a stay in the capital, as the protest went down mainly.
Many affected families have formed search teams, known as “Bascadors”, immersing the country’s rural areas and deserts, follow the tip-offs, often from cartoles, as a hideout of graves.
Buscadores carry out discoveries and their activism at great personal risk. After a recent discovery in the state of Jalisco, a clear narco-rainch by a search group, many buscadors involved had disappeared.
The State Attorney General’s office later concluded that there was no evidence of a cremation on the site.
The United Nations has called it a “human tragedy of vast ratio”.
Mexico is experiencing a level of disappearance that crosses some of the worst tolls in Latin America.
About 40,000 disappeared in Guatemala’s 36 -year civil war, which ended in 1996. Estimated 30,000 disappeared in Argentina under their military rule between 1976 and 1983.