
Mexico: Six severed heads found on road
It is the same name as a little-known criminal group operating in the western state of Guerrero but it isn't clear if they were behind the attack or why.The local prosecutor's office said the heads found in Tlaxcala were those of men and it has launched an investigation into the killings, according to AFP news agency.As well as drug-trafficking, there is an issue in the region with fuel smuggling, known as "huachicolea", which generates billions of dollars a year for the groups behind the illegal activity.So far, federal authorities have not commented on the killings.They come amid a major crackdown by the administration of President Claudia Sheinbaum on fentanyl trafficking.Puebla and Tlaxcala are not prone to the kind of extreme cartel violence prominent in other parts on the country.In June, the bodies of 20 people - four of them decapitated - were found in Sinaloa, a state gripped by gang violence.Seven Mexican youths were also killed in a shooting at a Catholic Church festivity in the central state of Guanajuato in May.Violence between cartels has surged in recent years, with hundreds of thousands of people killed and tens of thousands missing since the government first began to use the Mexican military against gangs in 2006.
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The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
Michigan couple held in Mexican jail for a month over a timeshare dispute say the judicial system was weaponized against them
A Michigan couple held in a Mexican jail for a month over a timeshare dispute at a Cancun resort claim the judicial system was weaponized against them. Paul, a Navy veteran, and Christy Akeo were released in early April after being arrested soon after their plane touched down in Cancun in early March. They allege Palace Resorts LLC began a 'secret lawfare campaign' against them after they disputed more than $100,000 in credit card charges, according to a lawsuit filed by the couple in Miami-Dade County Circuit Court on Friday. The New York Post, which first reported on the lawsuit, said the couple had bought timeshares for the resorts' Cancun location starting in 2016. The couple were 'wholesale customers' and would resell the resort bookings to others, according to the lawsuit. The terms of the Akeos' agreement with Palace Resorts changed in November 2021, and after, the resort claimed the couple 'breached their membership,' the suit says. The resort later went back on bookings the Akeos had set up for others, so the couple successfully disputed the credit card charges since the 'product or services had not been received,' according to the suit. Everything came to a head this past March when the couple was arrested by Mexican authorities at the Cancun International Airport after the resort accused them of 'fraudulently' disputing the credit card charges, court documents obtained by The Independent show. The couple spent a month in a maximum security prison in Quintana Roo, separate from each other, where they slept 'alongside drug dealers and violent criminals,' according to the documents. The conditions in the prison were deplorable, with 'no working shower and no flushable toilet,' the Akeos alleged. Lindsay Hull, Christy's daughter and Paul's stepdaughter, told the New York Post her mom lost 25 pounds in her first two weeks in prison because the food she was given had fish in it, even though she told the prison she was allergic. The couple was eventually taken to court and told by their lawyer and Michigan Congressman Tom Barrett, who went to Mexico to help get them home, they needed to sign a settlement that included a non-disclosure agreement to get out of prison, according to court documents. 'Palace Resorts coerced the Akeos under duress to affix their signatures' on the agreement, while next to men carrying machine guns, the Akeos claim. 'It's not fair that my parents are not able to speak about their story,' Hull told the New York Post. 'They deserve to advocate for themselves.' The resort has rejected the Akeos' claims through attorney David Orta, who said, per the New York Post, that his client will 'defend against them and otherwise take appropriate legal action to enforce the Palace Company's rights.' 'Mr. and Mrs. Akeo have unfortunately proceeded with additional litigation against the Palace Company and affiliated entities and individuals in violation of the parties' resolution of their disputes,' Orta said.


The Independent
2 hours ago
- The Independent
Guatemala grants temporary status to 161 Mexicans fleeing organized crime
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The Guardian
2 hours ago
- The Guardian
Embroidery honors Mexico femicide victims: ‘The next name might be yours'
It started with the killing of 25-year-old Ingrid Escamilla, who was murdered and mutilated by her boyfriend in February 2020. The brutality of the murder – and the leaking of explicit images of her body to tabloid newspapers – touched off a national furor. Escamilla's murder struck artist María Antonieta De la Rosa with both horror and disgust. Even in a country where more than 10 women on average were being killed every day, it felt especially cruel. 'You realize how permeating this violence is,' she said. 'It's normalized in every direction.' With its mixture of cultural machismo and generalized cartel-fueled violence, Mexico is one of the most dangerous countries for women in the region: between January and June this year, 1,420 women were killed across the country, according to government figures. The high rates of violence have sparked a powerful national feminist movement, with hundreds of thousands of women taking to the streets every year on International Women's Day in cities all over Mexico, demanding a response from authorities. At the time of Escamilla's death, De la Rosa was studying for a master's degree in fine art and had become interested in embroidery, an art form which, while often overshadowed by the likes of painting or sculpture, has long been used as a tool of protest and resistance by women in Mexico and around the world. Keen to do something to draw attention to both the murder of Escamilla and the killings of other women in her home state of Morelos, just south of Mexico City, De la Rosa called together two activist friends, Karime Díaz and Xóchitl Guzmán, ahead of International Women's Day in March of 2020. Along with their mothers, grandmothers and friends, they gathered in a former women's shelter in the city of Cuernavaca and held a symbolic funeral for Escamilla. They also began embroidering patches with the names of women murdered in Morelos in previous years. 'It was very contradictory to feel so supported but at the same time to share this uncertainty, this pain, this sadness in embroidering the names of victims of femicide,' said Díaz, referring to murders in which a woman is killed because of her gender. 'And you also realize that you yourself are in danger. The next name they embroider might be yours.' Among the patches that Díaz was tasked with embroidering was that of a three-year-old girl whose body had been found in a field of roses with signs of torture and sexual abuse. The next day, as hundreds of women took to the streets of Cuernavaca, De la Rosa and her friends joined the march carrying a coffin draped with a quilt embroidered with the names of dozens of women murdered in Morelos. As soon as they appeared, the whole march fell silent. '[People said,] 'Stop, let them pass,' as if we were really carrying [the victims' bodies],' Díaz recalled. 'It was very powerful.' De la Rosa and her colleagues decided to put out an open call on social media to any women that wanted to participate. Their goal: to embroider all the names of women killed by femicide in Morelos since 2015. Pandemic restrictions prevented them from gathering in person in 2020, but dozens of women signed up and were assigned names to embroider on patches of fabric and then mail in. The patches were then woven together into a giant quilt. The next year the women were able to gather in person, but the founders realized that, for many, the process of embroidering a name could be incredibly painful: even if they had no direct relation to the murdered woman, they often found coincidental connections. 'There were people who told us, 'I was given someone who was found in the town where I was born' or 'I had to embroider my sister's name,'' Díaz explained. 'We realized it required a special kind of support.' They started making the open calls only once a year, holding four sessions over the course of a month with guidance and workshopping from the founders, including Guzmán, who is a trained psychologist. 'Embroidering is an artistic process that takes time,' she said. 'It's a very intimate process.' In December 2023, the project became even more personal when the brutalized body of a fellow artist and activist, María Fernanda Rejón, was found dumped on the side of a highway not far from Cuernavaca days before Christmas. 'It was a reminder that no one is exempt,' said Díaz. 'And a threat to us too, because she was someone very visible and very loved by the entire community.' With the blessing of Rejón's mother, the group began another quilt of their friend's face surrounded by butterflies. Though still unfinished, Rejón's mother began carrying it at women's marches in Cuernavaca. The collective, Las Nombramos Bordando – 'We Name Them by Embroidering' – has continued to grow, with women from other states also sending in patches to be added to the quilts, of which there are now three. So far, nearly 100 women have participated, embroidering almost 200 patches. As well as the more formal annual gatherings, the collective holds informal sessions on Sundays throughout the year, where women gather to learn how to embroider or to make more butterflies for Rejón's memorial quilt. On a recent sunny Sunday morning, a group of eight or so women, including De la Rosa, Díaz and Guzmán, gathered in a park in Cuernavaca to stitch together. Two of their quilts were strung up behind them, blowing gently in the breeze. From afar, they looked like beautiful artworks, the names surrounded by flowers, butterflies, hearts. Only when the viewer is close enough to read the names does their brutal significance became apparent: Elizabeth Renata, eight months old, killed in February 2017. Angelica, 31, killed in January 2016. Petra, 80 years old, killed in September 2016. That, explained Díaz, is part of the quilts' power. 'Art allows us to enter people's lives in a different way, even if it's a form of protest, even if it's very subversive,' she said. 'People don't perceive it that way because it's a pretty quilt embroidered by women.' 'It's like a Trojan horse,' De la Rosa added. Embroidering butterflies along with her mother was Ana Vázquez, who joined the collective during the pandemic. Vázquez, who is herself a survivor of rape, said that embroidering was a way of taking action in the face of so much violence. 'We're not going to change the world with this,' she said. 'But at least we're making noise. At least people are looking at us, at least people are talking about these femicides. They're not just numbers in a database.' Still, for Vázquez, there was also a dark side to the process. 'I can't stop thinking that my name is going to be up there some day,' she said. 'I can't stop thinking that one of the other women is going to be embroidering me.'