Drones, bullets and cartel warfare fuel an invisible displacement crisis in Mexico


TULA, Mexico (AP) — When bombs fell from the sky and bullets ricocheted off her concrete floors, 74-year-old María Cabrera and her family fled into the night-cloaked mountains of central Mexico with only the clothes on their backs.

A week later, Cabrera picks through the charred scraps of her life, salvaging pots, woven cloths and a small wooden cross. She knows that it’s the last time she’ll return to her home of 60 years.

“Oh God, why have you abandoned me,” she said through heartbroken sobs, wandering past burned ashes of what was once her mattress in a small room with a collapsed roof and a melted refrigerator just through the door. “How are we going to rebuild? We don’t have money, we don’t have anything.”

She joined a growing number of people displaced in conflict-torn regions of Mexico forced to flee their homes. Experts have described the phenomenon as an invisible crisis with long-term humanitarian consequences — there are few official figures on the number of displaced people, who have almost no resources to turn to once violence forces them to leave.

‘We can’t live here anymore’

Cabrera fled her small town Friday after years of mounting cartel violence in Tula. This town of around 200 native Náhuatl people is among many in the central state of Guerrero ravaged by decades of fracturing rival criminal groups warring for territorial control.

Last week, a group known as Los Ardillos attacked her town and a handful of others with drone-fired explosives, opened fire on local community police forces, killed livestock and burned homes like Cabrera’s to an undistinguishable crisp.

Cabrera carefully handed bags of belongings to soldiers escorting a small group of families returning home to gather their things. She prayed as armed men in camouflage loaded her possessions into the back of a truck. As she wandered through her garden for the last time, she begged forgiveness from the dogs and chickens she was forced to leave behind.

“We don’t want to abandon them,” she said. “But we suffered through everything. We can’t live here anymore.”

Scattering across Mexico

A local human rights group, Indigenous and People’s Council of Guerrero-Emiliano Zapata, or CIPOG-EZ, estimated that at least 800 people, including children and the elderly, were forcibly displaced along with Cabrera, and three community police officers — groups often formed to protect themselves in the wake of state absence — fighting back against the mafia were killed.

The official numbers are far lower: Mexico’s government said Tuesday that only 120 people were forced to flee and confirmed no deaths. One community leader sleeping at the basketball court on Friday told a local government official that in their town alone they estimated around 280 people had been forced to flee.



Source link

  • Related Posts

    High schoolers win prize for eco-friendly ECG sensors made from lobster shells

    SAINT JOHN — A New Brunswick high school student has proposed environmentally-friendly heart monitoring sensors that use excess material sourced from lobster shells — and she hopes they can be…

    Ice cream sold in 17 states recalled over possible metal contamination

    California-based Straus Family Creamery is recalling multiple organic ice cream products in pint and quart sizes due to the potential presence of metal fragments, according to a notice published Friday…

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    You Missed

    22-Hour Flights: Air India Suspends 3 Ultra-Long-Haul Routes To The US

    22-Hour Flights: Air India Suspends 3 Ultra-Long-Haul Routes To The US

    Train Crashes Into Bangkok Traffic, Killing at Least 8

    Train Crashes Into Bangkok Traffic, Killing at Least 8

    Mole is the best new app for cleaning up your Mac

    Mole is the best new app for cleaning up your Mac

    Part I, Volume 155, 1st quarterly index

    Here's how to get a free mattress — courtesy of Drake's Sleep Country Canada shout-out

    Here's how to get a free mattress — courtesy of Drake's Sleep Country Canada shout-out

    Palestinian pseudo-stealth game Dreams on a Pillow paints a difficult, poetic picture in its first look at gameplay

    Palestinian pseudo-stealth game Dreams on a Pillow paints a difficult, poetic picture in its first look at gameplay