IACHR Warns Widespread Disappearance
12 Articles
12 Articles
Amnesty International Mexico urged the Mexican State on Monday to accept international technical assistance and strengthen the search and identification strategies, following the latest report of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) on the disappearance crisis in the country, with more than 133,000 official records. The organization described the report released this day as “an urgent, serious and necessary call”, which shows th…
The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) urged Mexico on Monday to take a series of actions to address what it called a “serious” and “generalized” crisis of missing persons that has been exacerbated by violence, the complicity of some authorities with organized crime and “structural impunity.”
The image is not usual: there is the same table sitting, at one end, Arturo Medina and Enrique Ochoa, two senior human rights officials of Claudia Sheinbaum's government, and at the other, Bibiana Mendoza, spokesman for the collective of Guanajuato To Find You, who has been searching for her brother Manuel for eight years. In the center, the vice president of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR), Andrea Pochak, trying to serve a…
Mexico City.- The disappearance in Mexico is a widespread phenomenon, warns the report presented this Monday by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR). "Mexico faces a serious crisis of disappearances and human identification. Although the Commission values the institutional and normative advances promoted in recent years by the State -especially in the area of search-, structural challenges remain that seriously compromise intern…
The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) said that enforced disappearance has not been eradicated in Mexico and the disappearance of people in our country generates a serious human rights crisis. IACHR figures: “How many people have disappeared in Mexico? In its most recent report “Disappearance of people in Mexico, ” revealed today May 11, 2026, it notes that, at the court in June 2025, more than 128 thousand people have disappeare…
Puebla ranked among the 10 states in Mexico with the most cases of missing minors, registering 617 reports through August 2025, according to the report "Disappearance of Persons in Mexico" prepared by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR). The international body documented a total of 18,192 cases of missing children and adolescents in the country, 71.32 percent of which are concentrated in just 10 states, including Puebla. Accord…
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