March Thousands for 130,000 Missing

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Will give GrantMexico correspondent and

Chris GrahamBBC News

Reuters woman has a reading sign "President, what does a country who sow bodies of harvest?" During a protest with a celebration of International Victims Day of the Mapped City Missing In Mexico CityReuters

A woman holds a sign with the inscription “President, what does a country that sow bodies of harvest?” During a protest in Mexico City

Thousands of people have held protests in Mexico to emphasize the numerous disappearance in the country and to require more actions for employees to deal with them.

Relatives and friends of missing people, as well as human rights activists, crossed the streets of Mexico City, Guadalajara, Cordoba and other cities calling for justice and called on President Claudia Sieinbaum’s government to help find their missing loved ones.

More than 130,000 people have been reported missing in Mexico. Almost all of the disappearance has happened since 2007, when then President Felipe Calderon began his “war against drugs.”

In many cases, the disappeared were forcibly assigned to the drugs – or were killed for resistance.

While the drug marks and organized crime groups are the main perpetrators, security forces are also accused of death and disappearance.

The widespread distribution of cities, states and municipalities, where demonstrations take place, illustrates the extent to which the problem of forced disappears affects communities and families in Mexico.

From one end of the country to the other – from the southern states such as Oakaka to the North, such as Sonora and Durango – activists and members of the family of missing people, who were given in their thousands, carrying signs with the faces of their relatives to them to require the authorities to do more to deal with the problem.

Reuters demonstrators and relatives of missing persons are protesting to mark the International Victims Day of Mapped in Mexico CityReuters

Protesters celebrated International Victims Day of the Missing Missing

In Mexico City, the hike led to stagnation in the capital, as the protest was moving along the main road head.

Many affected families have formed search teams known as the Buscadores that shake the countryside and deserts of northern Mexico, following the tip, often from the cartels themselves, regarding the location of mass graves.

Bucadors perform their searches and activism at high personal risk. Following the recent discovery at Jalisco State on an obvious drug ranch from a search group, several of the Bukadori participants had disappeared.

Later, the General Prosecutor’s Office came to the conclusion that there was no evidence of a crematorium at the site.

The organization of the United Nations called it “a huge -size human tragedy”.

Mexico is experiencing a level of extinction, which surpasses some of the oldest road fees in Latin America.

About 40,000 disappeared in the 36-year civil war in Guatemala, which ended in 1996, approximately 30,000 disappeared in Argentina at their military rule between 1976 and 1983.

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