This entry was posted on 7/30/2008 2:59 PM and is filed under uncategorized.
Women Still Being Murdered in Juarez
Friday, July 18 2008 @ 05:12 PM CDT
Contributed by:
Oread Daily
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It's business as usual in Juarez.
The decomposing body of a teenage girl was found Thursday afternoon at
the edge of an agricultural field in Juarez, Chihuahua state police
said. The victim was found in the same subdivision that reported an
attack last month against a 14-year-old girl inside a grocery store.
WOMEN STILL BEING MURDERED IN JUAREZ
Oread Daily
It's business as usual in Juarez.
The decomposing body of a teenage girl was found Thursday afternoon at
the edge of an agricultural field in Juarez, Chihuahua state police
said. The victim was found in the same subdivision that reported an
attack last month against a 14-year-old girl inside a grocery store.
Investigators said the 16-year-old girl found dead was strangled. She
is described, reports KVIA in El Paso, as being dark-skinned, with dark
hair that was cut short at the forehead and was long at the rear.
The death was the second woman slain in Juárez this week.
On Wednesday morning, the Los Cruces Sun reports, another woman was
found in the abandoned Casa Quiñonez retail center in a construction
zone downtown . She died at a hospital about an hour after she was
found.
The unidentified woman, who was about 45 years old, had multiples cuts and bruises on her body and may have been stabbed.
This brings to 17 the women killed so far this year in this city
bordering the United States, and to more than 400 since 1993,
authorities said Thursday.
Many say those numbers are way low.
Organizations such as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, for
example, vehemently believe 400 is a conservative estimate, citing the
Mexican government's necessity to undermine the actual count to avoid
further scrutiny, for apprehension it will put further strain on
political and economic relations with its trading partners.
Many of the murdered women, including the two latest victims, appear to have been sexually assaulted.
"Women murders are a sad reality and go unpunished," Maria Tabuenca and Julia Monarrez said in a book on the numerous homicides.
"There's no indication so far of any commitment from federal or state governments to solve these murders," they added.
The police, who have done such a wonderful job with this investigation
for all these years say, however, they are on top of the case.
Less than a month ago, a Mexican judge sentenced Edgar Alvarez Cruz to
26 years in prison for allegedly murdering women in Juarez, Mexico.
Judge Flor Mireya Aguilar, who previously revoked the charges against
Alvarez for lack of evidence, reversed herself today and found him
guilty.
The same judge has presided over previous femicide cases with controversial findings and rulings.
According to the blog site of Diana Washington Valdez (an investigative
reporter for the El Paso Times, and pictured above), Alvarez has
repeatedly denied the allegations, and witnesses testified he could not
have the committed the slayings attributed to him because he was in
Colorado at the time.
Chihuahua state authorities, Valdez points out, have a history of using
scapegoats to solve the women's murders, and supporters of Alvarez,
including criminologist Oscar Maynez, contend there was no evidence
linking the Juarez man to the crimes.
George Gonzalez, a crime investigator cited by Valdez, said the U.S.
embassy in Mexico had a role in this latest episode of the notorious
Juarez deaths.
"Nothing seems to change," he said. "It's the same old corruption, only
this time the U.S. embassy in Mexico, which pressured the Mexican
authorities to develop a conviction from the tip it provided, may be to
blame for an innocent man's incarceration. Everyone knows the real
killers are still out there. The killers know who they are and must be
laughing.
"This is the biggest irony. You've got cops that might be crooked
seeking U.S. asylum and medical treatment in New Mexico and Texas. The
Mexican authorities brought out the army to calm the drug violence
perpetrated by drug dealers and their corrupt accomplices. Criminals
like (former Juarez police chief) Saulo Reyes are getting the red
carpet treatment, even if he is in jail, while families of the femicide
victims get brushed aside.
"Nobody called up the army for the girls, nor was any of them ever sent
to El Paso, Texas, for treatment. I sort of expected the case against
Alvarez Cruz would resurface during this chaotic time at the border,
and there it is."
And there it is.
The following is from Newspaper Tree.
Group issues report on violence against women in Juarez
by NPT Staff
Editor's note: The following is an e-mail update sent by Amigos de las
Mujeres de Juarez, a group that tracks violence against women in
Juarez. It is a sobering assessment of conditions in that city, which,
although the murder rate may exceed only slightly that of a violent
U.S. city (such as Detroit), has become more and more unstable due to
the drug wars and the attendant breakdown in the protections taken for
granted in civil society.
***
Murders
This year Cuidad Juarez has been engulfed in violence. Army troops
patrol the streets and over 450 men have been murdered so far this year
in cartel violence. In the midst of this, Casa Amiga Centro de Crisis
A.C. has recorded seventeen cases of femicide from January 1, 2008
until May 5, 2008 . The victims have ranged in age from ten to
forty-eight years old. One of the victims was eight and a half months
pregnant and the fetus was also lost in the crime. Seventeen of the
victims could not be identified. In each case where a perpetrator was
suspected or found guilty the individual was male. Several of the cases
included the sexual violation of female murder victims including the
case in which a ten year old girl was found completely nude in her own
home with a bag of condoms next to her deceased body. Many of the
victims were murdered with knifes or guns. Many were stabbed multiple
times in the neck, back and chest. Other victims sustained multiple
bullet wounds also to the neck and head. One twenty year old victim was
stabbed three times in the neck and eight times in the back. Another
victim was shot to death and found with 31 bullet wounds throughout her
body. Almost half of the victims left more than one child behind. While
some of the female victims were killed and left in their own homes
others were left in open fields surrounding Ciudad Juarez . One victim
was killed in front of her own home, another was thrown out of a moving
car and another was found in a bloody hotel room where 95 bullet shells
were also discovered. In one case where the identity is still unknown,
a female body was found in el Valle de Juarez where the victim was
determined as having been dead over a month. The remains of this
unknown victim were found half nude and devoured by animals. As a
result of the state of the victim’s body, the cause of death has also
yet to be established. Despite the high number of murders that have
already taken place this year in Ciudad Juarez the government’s efforts
to investigate and determine the perpetrators of these crimes remains
very low. According to WALO (Washington Office on Latin America) “flaws
in the police and judicial institutions compounded by gender biases,
resulted in a blatant failure of Mexican authorities to investigate,
prosecute and punish those responsible for the murders, contributing to
a climate of impunity.”
Missing
Casa Amiga along with the Centro de Derechos Humanos de las Mujeres
have also determined that at least two women have been reported missing
this year already. Adriana Sarmiento Enriquez was last seen on Friday
January 18th of this year where her friends say she waited at a bus
stop after eating with them upon leaving school. Adriana is fifteen
years of age and remains missing six months after her friends last saw
her. Hilda Gabriela Rivas Campos, another high school student who is
sixteen years of age, disappeared in a similar manner. Hilda was
walking through the center of Ciudad Juarez on her way home from school
when she was last seen on February 25th of this year. The families of
both of these two young women continue to search for their loved ones.
Threats to Activists
Several human rights and women’s rights activists in Ciudad Juarez work
diligently to continue supporting and aiding the victims’ families in
their quest to find justice for their daughters. Activists include
Cipriana Jurado who works with women’s rights organizations and is also
the director of the Worker Research and Solidarity Center in Ciudad
Juarez . Jurado is well known for her long-time support for families of
female murder victims. On April 2nd of this year, Jurado was arrested
by Mexican police officers and shoved into an unmarked vehicle. Jurado
had just recently returned to Ciudad Juarez and was arrested exactly a
day after visiting forensic offices in an effort to further investigate
a young woman’s murder. The charges made against Jurado in April of
this year date back to an incident that took place during a protest in
2005, three years prior to her recent arrest. After hearing of Jurado’s
arrest, several activists on both sides of the US-Mexican border came
together to protest the charges made against her. The group of
protesters met in front of the federal court offices in Ciudad Juarez .
Among those protesting Jurado’s arrest was Casa Amiga’s Esther Chavez
Cano and members from the Juarez organization Nuestras Hijas de Regreso
a Casa. Marisela Ortiz, the current spokeswoman for Nuestras Hijas,
reported that she had recently received death threats via telephone and
email. Also well known in the Juarez activist community is Chihuahua
city lawyer, Lucha Castro, who is also the director of the Women’s
Human Rights Center in Chihuahua . Castro also reported having received
threats in the same manner as Ortiz. All four of the women mentioned
above have been active in a widespread effort to continue the efforts
to seek justice for the murdered women of Juarez . What remains
puzzling is why these women, after numerous years of involvement in the
efforts to end the femicide, are now being targeted and by whom?
Recent Events
Recent events in Ciudad Juarez may help explain the latest threat to
female activists working in the city. According to recent reports found
on FronteraNorteSur.com, the Mexican government has implemented a
military coalition known as “Operation Chihuahua Together”. In a
response to increased drug trafficking and increased drug cartel
related homicides the government has brought the military into the city
of Juarez in an effort to control the drug crisis taking place
throughout the state of Chihuahua . Unfortunately, the military
presence has been unable to curb the violence. Instead the city’s
murder rate has already exceeded the rate for the full year of 2007. If
this trend continues, the number of murders will likely double from
2007 to 2008. Increased drug cartel activity, increasing murder rates
and military attempts to crack down the violence make conditions
exceptionally difficult and dangerous for femicide activists. Activists
like Esther Chavez Cano and organizations like Nuestras Hijas de
Regreso a Casa, and Justica para Nuestras Hijas continue to organize
and fight. On March 8th of this year only a few weeks prior to the
arrival of military forces in Ciudad Juarez the groups mentioned above
along with other activists from both sides of the US-Mexico border
joined on International Women’s day to protest the violence that
continues to target the women of northern Mexico. The protest held on
March 8th of this year marked the 15 year anniversary of the femicide
in Ciudad Juarez .