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Author Topic: City of tears: A decade of female murders haunts Mexico
Thunderball
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Rape and molestation do happen in Egypt, and the reason we are discussing these topics here is because this forum is relevant to Egypt. If we posted articles irrelevant to Egypt -- like this one -- we would be OFF topic. And the fact that rape and sexual harassement can occur just about anywhere, is no excuse for the behaviour of the Egyptian sexual harrasers.


Last Updated: Tuesday, 14 November 2006, 10:29 GMT
BBC News
Grim formula to Mexican murders


The Mexican town of Ciudad Juarez has been blighted by a grisly decade of unsolved rapes and murders of young women. As this grim drama is reprised in a new film starring Jennifer Lopez and Antonio Banderas, the BBC's Duncan Kennedy visits this violent border town.

In the dusty settlement of Ciudad Juarez they play a grisly game of numbers: 90, 180, 399. You do not have to ask what the numbers refer to anymore. Everyone knows. It is the body count of young women.

Celia Villagrana, Trinidad's daughter and victim
Celia Villagrana was abducted from Ciudad Juarez in 1995

No-one seems to have an exact figure, so people give you their own. The only common ground is when the murders began: 1993.

And they have not stopped since.

Trinidad Villagrana has only the number "one" on her mind. The one child she lost in 1995. Celia, an intelligent 17-year-old, who was abducted on her way home from work.

"I relive that day all the time," Trinidad tells me. "She was a serious girl who would never take risks. Why would they do that to her?".

The words stumble out amid attempts to stem the flow of tears now streaming down her cheeks.

'Poor investigation'

In many ways Celia's case follows exactly Ciudad Juarez's grim formula: A young woman taken at random, followed by an inept police investigation, followed by years of uncertainty for the family.

One sign of how the investigation into Celia's death has proceeded is that they have just found her skull in a box of old bones.

The bones were only identified thanks to the diligence and skill of a team of forensic experts from Argentina, now hard at work trying to reverse years of incompetence, or worse.

Juarez's misery is now depicted in a new film, Bordertown, starring Jennifer Lopez and Antonia Banderas.

It captures, perfectly, the sense of transience in the city - young women from all over Mexico coming to work in its many factories. Rootless and vulnerable.

Jennifer Lopez plays a reporter trying to get to the truth of the story. She also produces the movie. "It is a lawless place. Someone needs to get in there and take control to protect these women," she says.

Esther Chavez, a small woman in her 70s who runs Casa Amiga - a counselling centre in Juarez agrees.

She warns that Mexico's huge problem with domestic violence is not helping. "Some men believe they can act with impunity," she says.

"It's the police, or drug gangs or serial killers, or a combination of all three," she suggests.

Killing field

Police have made arrests down the years - an Egyptian man, a group of young men known as the "rebels" and then bus drivers.

But every time the police trumpet an arrest or conviction, the murders continue.

The latest man to be arrested is Edgar Alvarez Cruz, who was picked up by immigration authorities in the US and extradited back to Mexico.

He will stand trial shortly, accused of the 2001 murder of Mayra Juliana Reyes Solis, a 17-year-old high school student. He denies murder, but the authorities suspect him of involvement in the killings of at least nine other women.

The US Ambassador in Mexico, Tony Garza, described his capture as a breakthrough.

Oscar Maynez, who was in charge of forensics in the city when the murders began, took me to the most stark and startling place in this whole story.

Eight pink crosses stand in a clearing in a massive area of wasteland on the outskirts of Juarez, now covered in chest high vegetation.

The crosses were put up by the dead girl's families. This is the killing field of Juarez.

"Three bodies were found over there, and the other five just here," Mr Maynez tells me. "I believed from the start it was a gang of serial murderers."

He says the police came up with their own suspects and put pressure on him to help them. He could not do it and resigned.

As the personification of the legal establishment, I fully expected State Attorney General and former judge, Patricia Gonzalez, to defend the role of her officers.

But no. Instead, Mrs Gonzalez says she has put 100 of them under investigation.

"This cannot go on," she tells me. "Corrupt and amateurish officers bungling the inquiry into these women's murders."

Map of Mexico

I was stunned. And it went further. "We're sorry for what has happened," Mrs Gonzalez continued.

"There were errors in the past. We accept there was negligence and complicity by the police in previous years. But now we must work to prevent more deaths of women in a way that is professional and ethical."

This was no attempt at a cover-up, but an honest apology from the authorities. Long overdue, for sure. But still an apology.

I ask Esther Chavez if she thinks the murders will ever end.

"No", she says. "They will go on."

She probably speaks for the people of Juarez. How else could they get to play their numbers game?

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/6120512.stm

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