Veracruz, November 7 (RHC)-- In Mexico, an anonymous tip has led to the discovery of a mass grave in the state of Veracruz, a violent area that is home to a turf war between rival drug cartels.
According to Rosalia Castro Toss, "the information we have is that there could be 400 to 500 bodies. It was a death camp or worse," the Associated Press reported.
Toss said she received an anonymous tip which could reveal the corpses of missing children in El Arbolillo, Alvarado municipality, in the Mexican southeastern state of Veracruz.
Toss is the spokesperson of a group of mothers called the Solectio Collective, who have made it their mission to find the bodies of their children, victims of the bloody gang wars between rival drug cartels Jalisco New Generation and Los Zetas.
Just over the past year, Mexico registered a record 28,711 drug-related murders, and since 2006, when the government joined forces with the army to fight drug trafficking, more than 200,000 people have been murdered. Over 30,000 are missing, many of whom are the children of the Solectio Collective.
Corrupt officials in Mexico are accused of working hand-in-glove with the cartels during the administration of jailed ex-governor Javier Duarte, while a group of top officials face charges of running police death squads that eliminated their enemies during Duarte's administration.
Mass grave found in Veracruz, Mexico
Related Articles
Commentaries
MAKE A COMMENT
All fields required
Now Playing
En Compañía el Doctor
Next Program
- Noticiero
- El Mundo de la Filatelia
- La Música en el Cine Latinoamericano
More Views
- Ecuador hands over Galapagos Islands to build U.S. military base
- Cuba will defend its sovereign right to an independent, socialist future, committed to peace, sustainable development, social justice and solidarity
- Cuba is planning the establishment of a National Drug Observatory
- Cuban president reiterates call for march to end blockade
- More than one million illegal settlers run for bomb shelters after Yemeni missile strikes Tel Aviv metropolitan area