Mexico's Growing Missing List
A wave
of disappearances has human rights groups and lawmakers alarmed. In most
cases,
they say, the police and army are suspected as culprits.
By MARY BETH SHERIDAN, Times Staff Writer
NUEVO LAREDO, Mexico--They took him barefoot. Jose Luis Osoria had been
asleep when
the screams
of his 16-year-old daughter pierced the sweltering night. Flinging open
his bedroom door,
the carpenter
discovered six men armed with semiautomatic weapons. The men, some in black
federal
police
uniforms, shoved past his daughter and grabbed Osoria.
It was the last his family saw of him.
Today, after months of beseeching officials, demonstrating and visiting
the morgue in this city
across
the Rio Grande from Texas, Armandina Osoria still has no idea why her husband
was detained
on Aug.
13, 1998--or where he is.
"What we want to know is, if he's been killed, what happened? We want to
know, good or bad,"
said the
43-year-old mother of three, tears welling in her eyes. "If he's buried,
tell us."
Osoria's kidnapping is part of a mysterious wave of disappearances in Mexico
in recent years that
has alarmed
human rights groups. The issue captured world attention in December when
U.S. and
Mexican
authorities launched an unprecedented search for mass graves in Ciudad
Juarez amid the
revelation
that more than 100 people had vanished in that border city near El Paso.
But the problem of los desaparecidos--the disappeared--is much broader.
Quietly, say human rights groups, the toll has soared in recent years,
with hundreds vanishing in a
strange
mix of drug violence in northern Mexico and anti-guerrilla sweeps in the
south. In most cases,
the police
or the army are suspected, the groups say. Now, activists and legislators
are struggling to
attack
a problem that they believe may have claimed as many victims as did the
army's "dirty war"
against
leftist guerrillas in the 1970s.
"It's a social phenomenon in the whole north, not just in Ciudad Juarez,"
said Victor Clarke, a
prominent
human rights activist in Tijuana. "It's an unusual, alarming phenomenon
because of the
method.
And we always ask, where are the disappeared? Where did they put 400 people?"
Precise numbers of those who have disappeared are difficult to obtain.
The government's Human
Rights
Commission registered 524 cases in the 1990s, many allegedly involving
officials, compared
with 67
cases in the 1980s. The commission, which was founded in 1990, says it
has resolved more
than half
the cases from the past decade, finding the victims dead or alive.
But private human rights groups believe that the tally of missing is even
higher. They say many
disappearances
are never reported, due to families' fear of vengeance or distrust of authorities.
Clarke believes that as many as 400 people have been taken in northern
Mexico alone since the
mid-1990s,
some seized by soldiers fighting drug lords, others by corrupt police working
for the
traffickers.
Judith Galarza, head of Mexico's Assn. of Families of the Disappeared,
or AFADEM,
estimates
that the northern total could be as high as 500.
Scores of Suspected Guerrillas Missing
In the south, meanwhile, human rights groups have documented scores of
cases in which suspected
left-wing
guerrillas have vanished in recent years.
"There are different phenomena in Mexico that lead to a similar unfortunate
outcome:
disappearances,"
said Joel Solomon of Human Rights Watch in Washington, who wrote a report
last
year on
the problem. "There is, however, one underlying factor common to all of
the cases, and that is
the failure
of the justice system to deal with disappearances properly."
Analysts trace the growth in the problem to events in the mid-1990s. As
Mexico became a major
conduit
for Colombian cocaine, trafficking groups flourished along the U.S.-Mexican
border from
California
to Texas--and so did bloody conflicts.
But analysts note the reemergence of a chilling practice.
"This method that appeared was associated in the past with the military,"
said Clarke, the human
rights
activist, referring to the dirty war, during which as many as 500 suspected
guerrillas are believed
to have
been "disappeared." He added: "What I observe is that organized crime has
adopted this
method,
working with corrupt authorities."
Activists speculate that drug lords and their allies began to "disappear"
people to sow terror, or to
dispose
of evidence after they had tortured a victim to death.
Clarke's experience illustrates why the phenomenon has been so difficult
to pin down. He was
among
the first to investigate the new wave of disappearances. But in 1997, after
he had documented
seven
cases in Baja California, he was stopped cold: Anonymous callers threatened
to kill him.
"We decided not to touch the theme," he said.
Relatives of victims have faced similar threats. Ciudad Juarez is the only
place where families have
banded
together, demanding action on the 196 cases--including 18 involving Americans--they
have
recorded,
most from 1993 to 1997.
When they dare to report disappearances, many families get little help.
Consider the situation of Armandina Osoria. A stocky woman with lively
brown eyes, she sits on a
bed and
riffles through a file of letters, legal documents and photos regarding
her husband's case.
Since Jose Luis Osoria was hauled away, she tells a visitor, she has tried
everything. She has
sought
out officials in Ciudad Victoria, the Tamaulipas state capital, and the
military in Mexico City.
She has
organized demonstrations at government offices and the bridge linking her
city with Laredo,
Texas.
All without result.
When Osoria reported her husband's disappearance to federal police, she
recalls, the agent
responded
with a threat.
"He said if I was telling lies and my husband was involved in drugs, they
would take me prisoner,"
she recounted
in the interview at her home, a gray concrete-block building brightened
by faded
pink-flowered
curtains.
The family believes that Jose Luis Osoria was abducted after he was mistaken
for a neighbor.
Family
members say they have identified one of the men who took him--a federal
police officer whose
photograph
they spotted in a newspaper. He is still working, in a different city.
The federal police commander in Nuevo Laredo, Homero Martinez, at first
denied that he was
investigating
the Osoria disappearance. When a reporter showed him a photo of the agent
allegedly
involved,
however, he produced the paperwork.
"Of course we're investigating," Martinez said. He declined to comment
further, however, saying
the case
was still open.
Human rights activists say such callousness is typical. They charge that
authorities either dismiss
disappearances
as vendettas between traffickers or drag their feet because security forces
allegedly
are involved.
"We've seen cases where it was a year after the disappearance that the
first serious investigation
took place,"
said Solomon of Human Rights Watch. "That's ridiculous."
In their defense, Mexican authorities note that disappearances are hard
to investigate, especially
when relatives
won't cooperate. In addition, they say, criminals in Mexico often don police
uniforms,
making
it difficult to determine who is at fault. In some cases, missing people
turn out to have run away
or crossed
into the United States.
Many Cases Don't Get Reported to Panel
Alfonso Quiroz, a 37-year-old lawyer who heads the Program of Presumed
Disappeared for the
government's
Human Rights Commission, notes that his group has confirmed the whereabouts
of 297
out of
524 people registered as missing in the 1990s. But he acknowledges that
many cases are never
reported
to the commission. For example, it has recorded only 50 disappearances
in Ciudad Juarez.
"We are very worried. That's why we're working to strengthen this program,"
said Quiroz, noting
that the
commission recently won independence from the Mexican executive branch.
But critics note that the commission still can't conduct criminal investigations.
Those are generally
handled
by state prosecutors, and as a result, the federal government doesn't even
know the scope of
the disappearance
problem.
"I'm sure these clandestine graves don't exist only in Ciudad Juarez,"
Atty. Gen. Jorge Madrazo
Cuellar
told reporters last month. "We are ready to work with local authorities
to know if these actions
are being
repeated in other areas of the country."
Now a left-wing lawmaker has proposed making disappearances in which authorities
are
implicated
a federal crime. The bill, submitted in December by Congressman Benito
Miron, president
of the
Chamber of Deputies' Human Rights Committee, would increase the penalty
applied to illegal
detention
cases and require the government to pay reparation to victims its personnel
held.
Miron said the Ciudad Juarez graves are "an indication to society and maybe
to wavering
legislators
that, with such events, there is a need to make this a crime." Authorities
discovered nine
bodies
buried in the Ciudad Juarez sites; the whereabouts of the others missing
in the city continue to
be a mystery.
In addition to the disappearances in northern drug-trafficking regions,
the problem has resurfaced
in southern
Mexico. Activists say the toll of missing in the south began to rise in
1994, when the
Zapatista
rebels launched a short-lived uprising in Chiapas state. But most of the
disappearances have
occurred
in Guerrero and Oaxaca states, where the army has been confronting the
small left-wing
Popular
Revolutionary Army, or EPR, and its offshoots since 1996.
The Miguel Agustin Pro Human Rights Center in Mexico City and Amnesty International
have
documented
scores of such cases, allegedly involving the military, state police or
paramilitary groups.
AFADEM,
the relatives association, has registered nearly 100 such disappearances,
but the group
believes
that its list is incomplete.
Activists say a major difference in the south is that victims often reappear
days or months after
vanishing.
Some turn up in prison facing charges; others arrive home saying they had
been detained
and tortured
by the police or army.
Miguel Castro, a peasant and left-wing activist who disappeared April 5,
1997, told the Miguel
Agustin
Pro center that two short-haired men forced him off a bus outside Acapulco,
blindfolded him
and whisked
him by car and helicopter to a remote building. There, Castro testified,
men who
identified
themselves as military officials beat him and applied electrical shocks
to his head, wrists and
ankles,
demanding information about the EPR.
Castro returned home 16 months later, after the officials finally accepted
his claims of innocence,
he said.
They told Castro "that I was lucky to have been detained by the military,
because if the police
had captured
me, they would have killed me," he said in his testimony, which was sent
to the Human
Rights
Commission. Castro has been too frightened to press criminal charges, said
the Miguel Agustin
Pro center.
Little Evidence That Guilty Are Punished
Human rights activists say officials responsible for such abductions appear
to be treated leniently.
"The military prosecutor says they are punished, but we have no evidence
of that," said Rafael
Alvarez,
an investigator with the Miguel Agustin Pro center, noting that military
trials are generally
secret.
Repeated calls to seek comment from the military prosecutor, Rafael Macedo
de la Concha, were
not returned.
While the problem of disappearances seems to have grown sharply, there
has been little public
outcry.
Officials and human rights groups are stepping up their efforts to publicize
the problem.
Congressman
Miron is holding forums around the country on the issue. Activists recently
proposed
drawing
up a well-documented national list of those who have disappeared.
Manuel Miron, the legislator's brother and aide, says violence has grown
so much in recent years
that many
Mexicans have become desensitized, especially when suspected lawbreakers
are the
victims.
"But whether someone's thought to be a guerrilla or a drug trafficker,
human rights are human
rights,"
he said. "The state must respect those rights."