Police searching for a 2-year-old
boy who went missing from a marketplace in southern Mexico led authorities to a
house where 23 abducted children were being kept and forced to sell trinkets in
the street.
The children were being kept in
squalid conditions and physically and psychologically abused and manipulated to
sell handcrafted carvings and embroidered cloth in the colonial city of San
Cristobal de las Casas, authorities said.
Most of the victims were between
the ages of 2 and 15, but police said they discovered three babies between 3
and 20 months old during the raid of the house on Monday. Three women were
arrested and may face child trafficking charges, Chiapas state prosecutors
said.
Authorities believe the older
victims were also used to lure or kidnap younger children to add to the group.
All of the rescued children are now in the custody of child welfare officials.
“According to the children, many
of them were forced to go out on the streets to sell things, and moreover they
were forced to return with a certain minimum amount of money for the right to
get food and a place to sleep at the house,” said state prosecutor Jorge
Llaven.
According to video presented by
the prosecutors, many of the children slept on what appeared to be sheets of
cardboard and blankets on a cement floor and suffered from malnutrition.
Police were originally
investigating the disappearance of Dylan Esaú Gómez Pérez, who went missing
from a public market in San Cristobal on June 30.
A surveillance camera from a
nearby shop showed that a young girl who appeared to be about 13 grabbed the
little boy by the hand and led him away.
Despite the grisly discovery in
the house, prosecutors did not confirm that Pérez was one of the victims that
were rescued from forced labor and his mother is pleading with authorities to
widen the investigation to find him.
“None of the children (rescued)
is my son,” Pérez's mother said in an interview with local news reporters
outside of the National Palace in Mexico City, where she traveled to petition
President Andrés Manuel López Obrador to help find her son.
“I haven't heard anything about
my son,” she said tearfully.
Mexican police arrested three
women in connection with the rescue, who are facing charges of human
trafficking and forced labor.
Chiapas is the southernmost state
in Mexico and is located on the border with Guatemala.
Sexual exploitation, and human trafficking and forced labor. Without pay while living in appalling conditions of abuse.
I tried for years to ‘get in’ to the Zapatista world just to help in some way, a tribute to my half Maya grandmother. I finally was able to by partner with Schools for Chiapas. A terrific group originating out of San Diego. With SFC along with my grandmother being “part Maya” I was able to conduct amazing work. I have letters from the leaders making note of my grandmother. If you want to learn more about SCF or perhaps donate use this link.
I Really like this site. It's the one I visit the most out of all other sites. It's sad though that just like other people that come here. We do it because to a certain extent we want to see what other "Shit" is happening in Mexico, like some kind of bad entertainment. I know that this is about informing people about what's happening. But it's fucking sad to see the things that are being done in Mexico. I am Dominican. And my country also has it's bad side. Just like other Hispanic countries. Just like other countries overall. But man. It's almost like a bad soap opera what's happening there. My goodness whatever Pablo Escobar. Or any other cartels have done, or do. Mexicans have taken it to a COMPLETELY DIFFERENT LEVEL.
ReplyDeleteI hope one day things get better. Because us Hispanic are where we are for being ignorant. And it's sad. Because we can be a superpower. But we don't think that way.
RESPECT TO CHIVIS AND THE OTHER CONTRIBUTORS.
Rubio NYC
Thank you Rubio, we appreciate your long standing support of Borderland Beat.
DeleteAnd thank you for letting me voice my opinion CHIVIS.
DeleteYou guys have a great thing going on here.
Rubio NYC
Rubio... one child got kidnapped, but not every mexican participated, you need to make your mouth smaller when you accuse a whole country for the crimes of a few...
Delete--it is like not every dominican is a half black who deports full black Haitians to their half of the island because they are the superior lighter skinned race overthere.
The Mexican government has long been trying to destroy the Zapatista people and their culture. The Zapatista uprising in the 90's was brutally crushed with the GAFEs (from which the founders of the Zetas came).
ReplyDeleteThe Mexican state wants to destroy any kind of identity other than being mexican. Poverty, crime and violence are the best way to achieve that result.
This just breaks my heart to pieces... Just imagine all the kids who are still being held captive and forced into doing God knows what... and thanks to the sh*t laws in Mexico, these bastards are going to get away with this.
ReplyDeleteThe only example the current prez is setting is to prove fervently that he is complicit, corrupt and cryptically callous.
Thanks for the link to Zapatista school. I'd like to be volunteer one day there are.
ReplyDeleteGreetings from Russia.
I hope they find that kid.
ReplyDelete