close
Fox News Flash top headlines are here. Check out what’s clicking on Foxnews.com.
A Mexican human rights group launched an online guide Wednesday for people searching for missing relatives, a real need in a country where authorities are slow to act.
Mexico has almost 110,000 people listed as missing, but many of the most effective searches are carried out by relatives or activists. Mexico’s antiquated, underfunded police system has been overwhelmed by waves of gang-fueled abductions and killings.
The legal system, meanwhile, is arcane in both terminology and procedures, and makes little allowance for people unfamiliar with legal terms.
Because families have to confront a steep learning curve when someone goes missing, the online guide tells people what the legal steps are for filing anything from a crime report to a constitutional injunction.
NEARLY 100,000 PEOPLE IN MEXICO HAVE DISAPPEARED
The Miguel Agustín Pro Juárez human rights center hopes the guide will help people find and preserve evidence and testimonies, and eventually find their loved ones.
María Luisa Aguilar, a director of the rights center, said families “face prosecution officials every day who are at best indifferent to their requests.”
Relatives of disappeared people gather for a tribute, during the commemoration of the International Day of the Disappeared, in Guadalajara, Jalisco state, Mexico, on Aug. 30, 2020.
(Photo by ULISES RUIZ/AFP via Getty Images)
Relatives often have to request and collect evidence like video camera footage and telephone records themselves.
Jacqueline Palmeros had to learn all this quickly for herself 2 1/2 years ago, when her daughter Jael Montserrat disappeared after boarding a vehicle on the outskirts of Mexico City.
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
Palmeros hopes the new guide will help others “to persevere in the pursuit of truth and justice,” and avoid having to learn it all as they go.
It is an uphill battle. Mexican authorities have about 52,000 unclaimed bodies on their hands that they have been unable to identify. With morgues overflowing, they have been forced to bury them in paupers’ graves. This means the cases of many missing people may never be solved.
close Video Mark Levin asks 'where the hell is the outcry' from U.S. leaders against…
close Video Fox News Flash top headlines for November 23 Fox News Flash top headlines…
close Video Fox News Flash top headlines for November 23 Fox News Flash top headlines…
close Video San Fran minors as young as 12 arrested over alleged retail crime involving…
close Video Dozens of Christian graves toppled and vandalized in historic Jerusalem cemetery Israel Police…
President-elect Trump has rounded out his picks for the top 15 positions within his Cabinet,…