Disir
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- Sep 30, 2011
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They are called los desaparecidos — the disappeared.
The term gained popularity among extralegal military and police forces in Argentina in the mid-1970s, describing people taken by government-backed armed forces. They vanished without a trace into a world void of human and legal rights.
Today there is a different war being waged in Mexico, and a new class of los desaparecidos.
More than 79,000 people have disappeared in the country, the vast majority since 2006 when former president Felipe Calderón launched Mexico’s war on drugs. Tijuana, a sprawling metropolis of 2.1 million people, became a front line as cartels fought to secure lucrative trafficking routes into the United States. More recently, neighborhoods on the city’s outskirts have been drawn in as low-level drug dealers fight and die for the right to sell methamphetamine on local street corners.
They really need to fix their criminal justice system. If the government cannot or will not protect the people then they need to go.
The term gained popularity among extralegal military and police forces in Argentina in the mid-1970s, describing people taken by government-backed armed forces. They vanished without a trace into a world void of human and legal rights.
Today there is a different war being waged in Mexico, and a new class of los desaparecidos.
More than 79,000 people have disappeared in the country, the vast majority since 2006 when former president Felipe Calderón launched Mexico’s war on drugs. Tijuana, a sprawling metropolis of 2.1 million people, became a front line as cartels fought to secure lucrative trafficking routes into the United States. More recently, neighborhoods on the city’s outskirts have been drawn in as low-level drug dealers fight and die for the right to sell methamphetamine on local street corners.
In their own words: Families talk about their endless search for Mexico's missing
BAJA CALIFORNIA, Mexico — They are called los desaparecidos — the disappeared. The term gained popularity among extralegal military and police forces in Argentina in the mid-1970s, describing people taken by government-backed armed forces. They vanished without a trace into a world void of human...
triblive.com
They really need to fix their criminal justice system. If the government cannot or will not protect the people then they need to go.