Más Información

Diputados avalan en lo general y en fast track Ley contra Desaparición Forzada; oposición denuncia violación a la privacidad

Los Alegres del Barranco consiguen suspensión de uno de lo procesos penales en su contra; juez autoriza medida por 6 meses

PAN denuncia a Vector de Alfonso Romo ante FGR; acusa operaciones con recursos de procedencia ilícita y encubrimiento

Cargo de López-Gatell en la OMS abre debate; morenistas lo celebran, oposición dice que “es una vergüenza”
The number of people in Mexico disappearing under suspicious circumstances, often related to drug violence, rose to 30,000 by the end of 2016, the National Human Rights Commission said on Thursday.
At the start of 2013, shortly after President Enrique Peña Nieto took office, the Mexican government reported there were 26,000 so-called "disappeared" people.
The Commission said the number of "disappeared" had risen to 30,000, with the drug-ridden northern state of Tamaulipas registering 5,563 missing, the highest state total.
It said six of Mexico's 32 federal entities failed to respond to its enquiries on the number of missing persons.
The Commission also said it had accounted for 855 mass graves across Mexico over the last decade, finding 1,548 corpses, the large majority of which were male. Just over half of those bodies have been identified, it added.
Well over 100,000 people have died in drug-related violence in Mexico over the last decade.