Migrants tell of mass kidnappings in Mexico before crossing into the
U.S.
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[December 14, 2022]
By Jose Luis Gonzalez, Jackie Botts and Daina Beth Solomon
CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico (Reuters) - Many of the hundreds of migrants who
crossed the Rio Grande from Ciudad Juarez into El Paso this week were
part of a group kidnapped in Mexico as they made their way to the United
States, according to nine migrants interviewed by Reuters.
Testimony from the nine migrants suggests there were multiple
kidnappings across several days in the northern state of Durango, with
people taken to at least two main locations and held against their will
while ransoms were demanded.
The kidnappings are a stark reminder of the dangers faced by migrants as
they travel across Mexico, crisscrossing areas rife with drug violence
and weak rule of law.
Most of the kidnapped migrants were Nicaraguans, who have been leaving
their homeland in growing numbers to claim asylum and pursue better
economic opportunities in the United States, encouraged by the knowledge
they are unlikely to be immediately deported due to frosty relations
between their government and Washington.
The incidents appear to comprise one of the biggest known mass
kidnappings in Mexico in recent years, said Stephanie Leutert, an
immigration expert at the University of Texas at Austin.
Four migrants said people in police uniforms stopped the buses they were
traveling in and attempted to extort them for between 200 pesos ($10)
and 5,000 pesos ($255), before entire busloads were taken by armed men
to nearby properties where they were held against their will.
Durango's state security office said it had not received complaints of
state police officers involved in the kidnapping and that municipalities
were responsible for their own officers. The Durango prosecutor's office
said it had not opened an investigation because it had not received any
complaints but confirmed rescues had taken place on Dec. 5 and 7.
In one incident, Mexico's Migration Institute (INM) said that along with
the Army and National Guard it had freed more than 250 people from a
property in the Durango town of Ciudad Lerdo on Dec. 5. The National
Guard confirmed the details in a separate statement.
In another incident, six migrants Reuters spoke to described being held
captive for several days. Two of them specified that they were rescued
along with hundreds of other migrants by Mexican federal law enforcement
on Dec. 7, and then began walking north on highways.
Fernando Reverte, president of Mapimi, a municipality which the migrants
passed through after their capture and release, said the group of
kidnapped migrants totaled about 1,500.
Mario Rizo, one of the migrants who said he was kidnapped, said he
believed his bus was stopped in the area of the adjacent cities of Gomez
Palacio and Lerdo by people in a municipal police patrol truck. Two
other migrants also said they had seen people in municipal police
uniforms during the kidnapping.
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Kidnapped migrants gather after a rescue
operation, in Ciudad Lerdo, Durando, Mexico in this handout image
released December 6, 2022. National Institute for Migration/Handout
via REUTERS
The head of the public safety unit in Gomez Palacio, Ivan Torres,
confirmed at least 300 people had been rescued on Dec. 7 from a
rural site in the area but that his officers had not been involved
in the kidnapping. The Lerdo mayor's office did not immediately
respond to a request for comment.
Reuters could not verify the total number of people who were
kidnapped in the region last week. Migrant estimates of the
different incidents, combined with the INM figure, suggests it was
over 1,000.
Authorities have not announced anyone caught or charged with
kidnapping.
'REACHED THE END'
Kidnappers rationed meager food and water, prioritizing women and
children, the migrants told Reuters. They said they spent chilly
nights sleeping on floors without blankets in what appeared to be an
event hall. Kidnappers yelled at them to stay quiet.
"I sincerely felt I had reached the end ... that I wasn't going to
survive," said Rizo, who is now in El Paso, Texas.
On Dec. 7, according to Rizo, the kidnappers departed quickly after
they appeared to spot authorities outside. The migrants broke down
the building's front door, and found members of the National Guard,
the Army and the INM outside.
The Army and INM did not respond to requests for comment about the
Dec. 7 rescue, while the National Guard said it participated as it
did on Dec. 5.
Byron Montiel, a Nicaraguan migrant also now in El Paso, showed
Reuters a receipt of a money transfer that he said a relative sent
to the kidnappers, and text messages from a kidnapper to one of his
relatives demanding money.
By Sunday, the group of migrants had traveled to Mexico's northern
border, where they formed a long queue alongside the border wall, in
one of the largest attempted group crossings in recent years.
Leutert said the incident was one example of what migrants went
through in the long journey to reach the United States.
"This kidnapping and others show the risks that migrants face in
Mexico and all the different groups trying to make money off of
them," she said.
($1 = 19.5774 Mexican pesos)
(Reporting by Jose Luiz Gonzalez in Ciudad Juarez and Jimenez;
Jackie Botts in Oaxaca City; and Daina Beth Solomon in Mexico City;
Additional reporting by Kylie Madry, Lizbeth Diaz, Ted Hesson and
Ismael Lopez; Editing by Stephen Eisenhammer and Rosalba O'Brien)
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