logo
Influencer's murder shows dark side of Mexican social media fame

Influencer's murder shows dark side of Mexican social media fame

Iraqi News16-05-2025

Zapopan – With her followers watching on TikTok, Mexican beauty influencer Valeria Marquez revealed her fears of being kidnapped or killed. Soon afterwards, a gunman arrived and shot her dead.
The 23-year-old's livestreamed murder has shocked Mexico — where killings and kidnappings are a daily occurrence — and brought into sharp focus both its femicide epidemic and growing violence against influencers.
Around 10 women or girls are murdered every day in the Latin American nation, but few draw as much attention as Marquez's sudden death while interacting with her fans.
Videos shared online show her last moments Tuesday in the beauty salon she owned in Zapopan, a suburb of the western city of Guadalajara in Jalisco state frequently shaken by criminal violence.
'Are you Valeria?' a man is heard asking off camera in a friendly tone.
'Yes,' the influencer replies, looking anxious.
Seconds later, Marquez slumps in her chair with gunshot wounds, watched by some of her tens of thousands of followers on TikTok.
The hitman is believed to have escaped on a motorcycle.
Earlier, Marquez had appeared nervous after a delivery man tried to bring a gift while she was out.
'Were they going to kidnap me or what?' she said.
'Maybe they were going to kill me.'
While the motive was still under investigation, Jalisco is a hotbed of drug-related violence.
The region is home to the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, a major drug trafficking group designated a terrorist organization by US President Donald Trump.
On Thursday, agents from the local prosecutor's office were seen interviewing potential witnesses near the scene of the crime, which was sealed off, an AFP reporter said.
'We didn't hear anything at all,' an employee of a nearby business said.
– Several influencers killed –
It is not the first murder of a social media star in Mexico, which has a history of musicians, influencers and other celebrities getting caught up in the criminal underworld.
In January, a small plane was reported to have dropped pamphlets on the northwestern cartel stronghold of Culiacan threatening around 20 artists and YouTubers for alleged dealings with a warring faction of the Sinaloa drug cartel.
Several influencers in Sinaloa have already been killed.
David Saucedo, an independent expert on Mexican cartels, said people who have fallen afoul of the gangs include informants, money launderers and those in romantic relationships with criminals.
'Influencers have become another cog in the machine of organized crime,' he said.
President Claudia Sheinbaum said that her security cabinet was investigating Marquez's murder along with the public prosecutor's office.
'Obviously, our solidarity goes out to her family in this deplorable situation,' she said at her morning news conference.
State security coordinator Roberto Alarcon told reporters on Wednesday that investigators had found no evidence that a criminal group was behind the shooting.
Zapopan mayor Juan Jose Frangie said that his office has no record of Marquez requesting help from authorities because of threats against her.
'It's incredible that (one minute) you're making a video and then you're murdered. A femicide is the worst thing,' Frangie said.
According to the United Nations, 70 percent of women over the age of 15 have experienced some form of assault at least once in their lives in Mexico.
On Marquez's Instagram account, where photos showed the young woman lounging on a yacht, by a swimming pool and in a private plane, some users paid tribute to the influencer.
Others speculated about the motive, the sources of her apparent wealth and possible role of an ex-boyfriend.
'Justice for Valeria,' multiple posts demanded.
'So young and beautiful, she did not deserve to have her life taken away,' one user wrote.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Businessmen Arbitrarily Detained in Iraq Released
Businessmen Arbitrarily Detained in Iraq Released

Iraq Business

timea day ago

  • Iraq Business

Businessmen Arbitrarily Detained in Iraq Released

By John Lee. Ireland's Tánaiste (Deputy Prime Minister) and Minister for Foreign Affairs, Simon Harris, has confirmed the release on bail of Robert Pether, an Australian engineer resident in Ireland, who has been imprisoned in Iraq since 2021. The announcement comes following a phone call from Iraq's Foreign Minister, Fuad Hussein, who personally informed the Tánaiste of the development. Pether, who remains in Iraq for now, has been at the centre of an ongoing diplomatic effort by the Irish government. Minister Harris described the release as " very welcome news " in what has been a " long and distressing saga " for Pether's wife and family. The Tánaiste also thanked Irish diplomatic staff in the region for their continued support and advocacy. He reiterated concerns about Pether's health and outstanding legal charges but expressed hope for a positive resolution and Pether's eventual return to his home in Roscommon. Pether and his Egyptian colleague, Khalid Radwan, were detained in April 2021 in relation to a dispute over the construction of the new Central Bank of Iraq (CBI) headquarters in Baghdad. They have been sentenced to five years in prison and jointly fined $12 million on charges of fraud. Their families claim they were tricked into travelling to Iraq to attempt to resolve the dispute. The UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention found that they were " arbitrarily detained on discriminatory grounds ", and referred the case to the Special Rapporteur on torture. In February 2023, the International Chamber of Commerce's (ICC) Court of Arbitration ruled that the CBI was at fault in the dispute, and ordered it to pay $13m to Abu Dhabi-based Cardno ME (CME). The statement from the Irish Tánaiste did not refer to Radwan, but AFP news agency cites an Iraqi official as confirming his release. (Sources: Irish Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade; AFP)

Pro-Palestinian protesters, police clash in Basel during Eurovision
Pro-Palestinian protesters, police clash in Basel during Eurovision

Iraqi News

time18-05-2025

  • Iraqi News

Pro-Palestinian protesters, police clash in Basel during Eurovision

Basel – Pro-Palestinian demonstrators clashed with riot police in Basel as the Swiss city hosted the Eurovision Song Contest Saturday, AFP journalists at the scene witnessed. Protesters demonstrating against Israel's participation in the contest while it ramps up its war in Gaza clashed briefly with police in the centre of the city shortly before Israel's Eurovision entrant Yuval Raphael took to the stage at the St. Jakobshalle venue across town. Blows were exchanged and police used tear gas and rolled in a water cannon truck as they strived to block demonstrators from marching through the centre of the northern Swiss city, thronging with Eurovision fans. According to Swiss news agency Keystone-ATS, the confrontation began when police intervened to stop an altercation after two men rushed towards the protesters waving Israeli flags. Israel's National Security Council issued a warning to Israelis in Basel about the demonstration, advising them to 'avoid confrontations with demonstrators and to keep Israeli identifiers low-profile in public spaces'. Amid a sea of Palestinian flags, hundreds of demonstrators, many wearing Palestinian keffiyeh scarves, carried signs stating: 'No Music for Murder', 'Stop Genocide', and 'Singing while Gaza Burns'. Some of the protesters burned giant Israeli and US flags, while others set off red and green smoke in the air. One woman, her face smeared with red, cradled a seemingly bloody bundle representing the children dying in the war raging in the Gaza Strip as police in riot gear looked on. At a time when Israel is dramatically ramping up the brutal war in Gaza, the protesters were demonstrating against the participation of the Israeli act, which is among the favourites in Saturday's final. Raphael survived the October 7, 2023 attack on Israel that sparked the war in Gaza, hiding beneath dead bodies as Hamas gunmen attacked a music festival, killing hundreds. During her performance of her song 'New Day Will Rise' on Saturday, loud whistles could be heard in the arena, according to an AFP photographer in the hall. There have been a number of smaller protests against Israel throughout Eurovision week in Basel, and demonstrators interrupted Raphael's act during a dress rehearsal for one of the semi-finals. Earlier this week, Israel's public broadcaster Kan said it had filed a police complaint after filming a protester apparently making a 'throat-slitting gesture' at the country's delegation during the Eurovision opening ceremony parade on Sunday. Israel launched an intensified offensive in Gaza on Saturday aimed at 'the defeat of Hamas', the Islamist militant group that launched a deadly attack on Israel in October 2023. The stepped-up campaign in the war that has already left tens of thousands dead came amid growing international concern over worsening humanitarian conditions in Gaza, where an Israeli aid blockade continues to restrict aid.

Libya's Tripoli back to calm after bout of deadly violence
Libya's Tripoli back to calm after bout of deadly violence

Iraqi News

time17-05-2025

  • Iraqi News

Libya's Tripoli back to calm after bout of deadly violence

Tripoli – Flights resumed on Friday at Tripoli airport as businesses and markets reopened after days of deadly fighting between armed groups in the Libyan capital. 'Last night, for the first time since Monday, residents of the capital were able to sleep without hearing explosions or gunfire,' an interior ministry official told AFP, speaking on condition of anonymity. After the bout of violence that pitted armed groups aligned with the Tripoli government and rival factions it seeks to dismantle, the official said: 'We believe the situation is moving toward a ceasefire.' Security forces were out in force for an anti-government demonstration joined by around 1,000 people from various parts of the capital, AFP journalists reported. But there were no immediate reports of any disturbances. Ahead of the demonstration, the UN Support Mission in Libya, UNSMIL, had underlined 'citizens' right to peaceful protest' and warned against 'any escalation of violence'. Authorities have deployed teams to clear the streets of barricades, burned-out vehicles and rubble caused by the violence, the latest outburst in Libya which has remained deeply divided since the 2011 NATO-backed revolt that toppled and killed longtime leader Moamer Kadhafi. The country is split between a UN-recognised government in Tripoli, led by Prime Minister Abdulhamid Dbeibah, and a rival administration in the east controlled by the family of military strongman Khalifa Haftar. The violence in Tripoli was sparked by the killing of Abdelghani al-Kikli, head of the Support and Stability Apparatus (SSA) faction, by the Dbeibah-aligned 444 Brigade. A second wave of clashes pitted the 444 Brigade against another group, the Radaa force, which controls parts of eastern Tripoli and several key state institutions. A string of executive orders had sought to dismantle Radaa and dissolve other Tripoli-based armed groups, excluding the 444 Brigade. UNSMIL said on Thursday there was a 'truce' in Tripoli, calling on 'parties to take urgent steps to sustain and build upon it through dialogue'. It said that 'at least eight civilians' were killed in the clashes, 'which drew armed groups from outside the city and subjected heavily populated neighbourhoods to heavy artillery fire'. The interior ministry source said authorities were patrolling key parts in Tripoli, as 'armed groups' vehicles' withdrew from flashpoint areas. 'It's a positive thing, and it indicates good intentions,' said the source. Human rights group Amnesty International demanded that 'militia leaders (be) held to account after the outbreak of violence in Tripoli'. It said for years, groups including the SSA 'terrorised people in Tripoli through enforced disappearances, torture, and other crimes under international law'. The International Criminal Court announced on Thursday that Libya had recognised its jurisdiction over allegations of war crimes committed in the North African country since 2011.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store