Mexico's Children Suffer in 'Little Jails'
Abuse Is Common at Detention Centers
By Mary Jordan
Washington Post Foreign Service
MERIDA, Mexico -- The walls are 15 feet high and topped with jagged
glass and barbed wire, ugly keepers of ugly secrets. For years they stood
sentry over
abuses of scores of children in state care, who were forced to eat
pig food, beaten, even tied to trees for days at a time.
Beto, a homeless boy, was 10 years old when the police brought him here
after they caught him stealing two shiny gold buttons from a store bin.
He thought he might
be going somewhere better than the street.
Instead, Betulio Chi Tzec spent the next five years behind the walls
of the Yucatan state juvenile correctional facility, a little boy locked
in a dormitory room with two
teenagers convicted of rape.
Beto, as well as a teacher and a physician who worked there, said the
woman who ran the youth detention home regularly beat the 50 children in
her care. They said
she kicked the children in the genitals, slapped them and sheared off
their hair in fits of rage. Beto said she told the children, "You are all
going to rot here," and he
came to believe she was right.
According to youths who have spent time inside the system, as well as
parents, government officials and many experts here, children are frequently
mistreated,
abused and forgotten in Mexico's "little jails," as the youth lockups
are known. Officially called "schools for young offenders," many of these
places are nothing more
than cold prisons where classroom teaching is rare.
There are 4,200 children living in dozens of detention centers across
Mexico. Conditions vary, and some centers are well run. But many operate
the same way they
did a century ago: out of public view and with little or no internal
regulation or outside supervision. Parents are often barred from entering,
though they are
encouraged to slip money to guards to prevent harsher treatment of
their children.
The Mexican government, battered by crime, has displayed little concern
or tolerance for children who break the law. That indifference, as well
as the secrecy that
shrouds the detention centers, has perpetuated shoddy and often cruel
practices, according to those with firsthand experience in the troubled
system.
"These institutions are horrible," said Elena Azaola, a criminal justice specialist who has conducted studies of the juvenile centers. "The children live in misery."
Mexico relies on an informal and largely unregulated system of juvenile
justice that has existed for decades. Children who break the law often
have no access to an
attorney. Administrative judges who handle juvenile cases set sentences,
but there is often no judicial follow-up once children are sent to detention
homes.
The real power is held by the directors of the centers. They effectively
decide how long a child will be held and under what conditions. The directors
are appointed
by governors or other top officials in each of Mexico's 31 states.
"For children there is no system of justice. They are the victims of
arbitrary decisions by those in charge," said Guillermo Alonso Angulo,
a consultant for UNICEF in
Yucatan state.
A system that abuses children and fails to punish the abusers is a legacy
of the one-party rule that dominated Mexico for most of the 20th century.
From 1929 until
2000, Mexico's presidents, and most of its governors, mayors, police
and local officials -- including those in charge of youth programs -- belonged
to the Institutional
Revolutionary Party.
During that era, government jobs were dispensed more out of political
loyalty than expertise. People running programs intended to benefit society
often did little other
than steal agency funds. Because of the party's hammerlock on power,
they rarely had to answer to the public.
President Vicente Fox, who took office in 2000, has promised to create
a new day for justice in Mexico. He has vowed that the law, not the personal
or political
whims of officials, will reign.
Now, the children locked away in detention centers are trying to hold him to his word.
Nearly every week recently, youths have climbed onto the roofs of their
detention homes, setting fires and starting small riots to draw attention
to their living
conditions. When reporters arrive, the children yell over the wall
that they have been beaten with brooms and belts.
On Oct. 2, in the western state of Nayarit, 37 children took over a
detention center, throwing stones and screaming that they were "tired of
the beatings." The day
before, in the northern state of Sonora, 40 children brawled with their
keepers, complaining about brutality. Similar uprisings have occurred in
six other states and
Mexico City this year, as angry children demand better treatment in
their little jails.
Allegations of Cruelty
Mexico is struggling to transform itself into a nation where people
feel protected -- not menaced -- by the law. Yet old ways prevail, as seen
in the horrors of the
Yucatan detention center.
The director, Maria del Rocio Martel Lopez, was a physician who had
superb local political connections. Some who knew her recalled that she
was tall, thin, blond
and impeccably dressed.
Dozens of children under her care have now come forward to say she brutalized
them. According to the findings of an investigation by the National Human
Rights
Commission, which issued a report in April, Martel presided for four
years over an institution with "cruel and degrading treatment" of children,
which included
"denigrating punishments, humiliations, beatings and mistreatment."
Allegations of cruelty by Martel were reported to the governor's office
as early as 1999. But the powerful, longtime governor who appointed her,
Victor Cervera
Pacheco, did nothing. Many here attribute his inaction to Martel's
social and political standing; she is the widow of a former powerful party
boss in the state.
A Merida radio station aired a report in 1999 about the allegations
against Martel, but the reporter, Jose Luis Preciado, said he was pressured
by state officials to
drop the matter.
"Sometimes she would tell boys to pull down their pants and she would
kick them in their private parts until they cried," Beto said of Martel,
echoing testimony given
to human rights investigators by people who worked at the center.
Psychologists and teachers, in interviews and in their statements to
investigators and police, said that Martel beat children until they bled.
Several recalled how she
forced one homosexual boy to dress like a girl.
Many of Martel's accusers cited the case of a teenage orphan, Catalina
Gijon Granados. She was held in the center for four years, often in windowless
isolation,
even though she had committed no crime.
Dulce Maria Alavez Soberanes, who taught crafts at the detention center,
called Martel's treatment of Catalina "unforgivable." She said that Catalina
was beautiful,
sweet and relatively well-adjusted until she landed on Martel's bad
side. After months of mistreatment, Alavez said Catalina appeared lost
and disoriented and
became a chronic bed-wetter, a skinny girl with sickly yellow hollow
eyes.
"She was locked up for almost two months in a room without a window,
given just one meal a day," Alavez said. "When she was let out, it was
as if she was
drugged."
For two years, Yucatan human rights lawyers complained without success
to the governor and other officials. Then they called the human rights
commission in
Mexico City. On an August day in 2001, the commission arrived at the
center to investigate. That day Martel quit her job and walked out the
door.
A criminal investigation was later opened, but no charges have been filed.
Martel's answer to the allegations against her is unknown. Efforts to
locate her were unsuccessful. Several months ago, neighbors said they saw
a moving van pull up
to her house, and they haven't seen her since. Officials at the state
attorney general's office said they did not know where she was, and that
she was being sought for
questioning.
Rights workers here in Merida said the government allowed Martel to
slip away to avoid the embarrassment of a messy trial with potentially
nasty political
implications. Mexico has a long history of looking the other way at
official misconduct.
"They would rather bury this part," said Angulo, the UNICEF consultant. "I think there should be a criminal trial. But I don't think there ever will be."
Sleeping With Pigs
When Isis Maria Velazquez was 13, she recalled, her mother became exasperated
with her misbehavior and turned her over to state care. She spent the next
two
years in Martel's facility.
The dates of her mistreatment remain etched in her memory. On July 27,
1999, she entered the center, and Martel chopped off most of her long,
shiny brown hair,
leaving it a short-cropped ugly nest. On May 9, 2000, she said, Martel
forced her into a muddy, filthy pen where she spent the next three nights
sleeping with 15
pigs.
"She shoved pig food in my face," Isis said. "She was crazy."
Her father, Lucio Jesus Velazquez, a retired night watchman, said poor
people in Mexico are accustomed to being powerless. He said he paid staff
at the center so
he could visit Isis and tried to buy better treatment for her. He said
Mexicans know they have to pay bribes to get service from the government,
and that complaining
often gets them nothing but more abuse.
"I don't know the laws," Velazquez said. "I'm not educated in them."
He said that until a human rights lawyer told him the state had no right
to treat his daughter as it
did, he did not realize that what happened to her might have been illegal.
Isis said she watched as other children were beaten with rubber tubes
and wooden sticks. She said some boys were tied to trees, blasted with
cold water from a
hose and left to sleep standing up.
Those allegations have been backed up by others who have complained
to police and human rights officials, including Sylvia Zenteno Ruano, a
physician hired by the
state to make weekly visits to the center. She said she is still haunted
by what she found one day: four boys tied to trees, rope wound around them
from their necks
to their knees.
"There was urine and excrement in their clothes so they must have been
there for a while," she said. Zenteno filed a complaint with the police
and waited. They did
not return her call for nine months.
Isis has now been out of the center for several months. She works as
a stripper in a bar called Atlantico. There, at night, she dances under
a mirror ball that throws
the glinting colors of the rainbow on zebra wallpaper. She said dancing
helps her forget her hatred, which she described as the only thing she
learned during her time
in the state's hands.
"They have punished no one," Isis, now 16, said of the authorities.
She now supports her father and they live in a tiny home in Merida with
almost no furniture.
"Some of the people who beat us are still working there. They just
don't care."
"I used to have dreams," she said. "But I don't anymore."
Shelters Unregulated
A sad failure of juvenile detention centers in Mexico is that some of
the imprisoned children have committed no crime. They are held because
they had no home and
the government could find no other bed for them.
The government operates few shelters for street children, ceding most
of the responsibility to churches and other private groups. Thousands of
children live in private
shelters without any government supervision.
The risks of this unregulated system were recently highlighted in Puerto
Vallarta, according to children's advocates, who said an American, Thomas
White, started
building a shelter for street children in 2000. He was allowed to do
so with almost no scrutiny or investigation of his background or qualifications,
they said.
"It is easier to open a shelter for children than a restaurant," Angulo said.
Police said they are looking for White, who has been charged with offering
money and food to street children in exchange for their posing for pornographic
photos
and videos. He fled after a state judge issued an arrest warrant last
year, and his whereabouts are unknown.
Juan Diaz Gonzalez, a Mexico City legislator, said such abuse is common.
He said some shelter operators in the capital have forced children into
prostitution rings or
illegal adoptions. Many of the shelters are so poorly run and funded
that he called them "trash cans where kids are thrown away. The government
is investing nothing
in these children," he said. "They are throwing away thousands of lives."
There are new efforts to clean up the system. Since Fox came to power,
top officials have been replaced, but many middle- and lower-level officials
have not,
particularly in the ranks of prosecutors and police. The government
has little money to pay good salaries for difficult jobs, such as dealing
with delinquents.
Under a new governor from Fox's National Action Party, Yucatan state
officials said they plan to build a $1 million detention center. They said
that only children
who have committed crimes would be sent there.
They promised better record-keeping to ensure that children serve their
sentences and no more. They promised that lawyers and human rights observers
would be
allowed access. But Yucatan, like most Mexican states, has plans and
promises bigger than its pocketbook. So far, the officials have had little
success in recruiting
people willing to take such difficult jobs for as little as $50 a week.
Years of Life Lost
Beto had been abandoned by his parents. Living on the street was tough,
he recalled, but it was nothing compared to the years of misery he suffered
at the hands of
the government.
"I lost a lot of my life," said Beto, who is now 16 and was recently released from the facility.
Beto wonders what his life would have been like had he not been forced
into the state system. His manner is withdrawn and unsmiling. He seems
like a serious man
in a child's body. He lives with his ailing grandmother, earning a
few pesos a day pedaling a bicycle taxi in a town 45 miles from here.
He doesn't like to talk about his years in Merida.
Interviewed at a taco stand in a colorful town square, Beto paused for
a long time after each question, sipping on a soda. He said he was not
angry, but the what-ifs
nagged at him.
"If I hadn't taken those two buttons, the police wouldn't have picked
me up," he said. "I could have found a job and a place to live. You can't
do that when you're in
jail."
Researcher Laurie Freeman in Mexico City contributed to this report.
© 2002