Más Información
Con prórroga o sin ella, elección judicial va, asegura Taddei; afirma que presupuesto de 13 mmdp no es ninguna “ocurrencia”
Así fingió “El Guacho” su muerte para vivir en Estados Unidos; su esposa es hija de “El Mencho”, líder del CJNG
INE aprueba calendario y programa de trabajo para elección judicial; hay un retraso del 15% en actividades
Senado inicia discusión para aprobar reforma contra maltrato animal; Estado debe garantizar su cuidado y conservación
Diputados inician debate para crear supersecretaría de García Harfuch; prevén que dictamen se apruebe por unanimidad
Mexican
police have arrested a woman suspected of running a sex trafficking network along the Mexico-U.S. border, which may be linked to the disappearance of several nursing students earlier this year, authorities say.
Claudia Palmira
is accused of coercing a teenage girl and a young woman into performing sexual acts in exchange for money and trafficking them across state lines, according to the Attorney General ’s office in the Mexican state of Chihuahua .
This case highlights the issue of human trafficking in Mexico , where an estimated 341,000 people live in modern slavery, according to the 2018 Global Slavery Index published by the human rights group Walk Free Foundation.
Figures from the Attorney General’ s office show that four out of five human trafficking cases in Mexico involve sexual exploitation .
“It’s an increasingly serious problem,” said Alfredo Limas Hernández , co-director of the Observatory of Social and Gender Violence from Chihuahua’s Autonomous University of Ciudad Juárez.
“The region has become a place where trafficking , sexual exploitation , and disappearances are a growing reality,” he said.
According to Hernández , many women who become victims of sex trafficking are first reported as missing and their corpse is later found.
Government's numbers show that as of April 2018, over 9,000 women are reported missing in Mexico . Over 2,000 men and women are missing from the border state of Chihuahua .
Jessica Rentería
, the spokeswoman for the prosecutor investigating the Palmira case, said authorities discovered the suspected trafficking operation after looking into the disappearance of three nurses who lived together in the town of Parral .
Mayra Mendoza Adame
, 21, disappeared on May 27, while Sigrid Diaz Huerta , 21, and Oswaldo Galvan Rodríguez , 22, were kidnapped by a group of armed men who broke into their home the following day.
A friend, Merari Lozano Muñoz , 18, also disappeared around the same time.
The investigation led authorities to suspect human trafficking and a link to Palmira , according to state Attorney General César Augusto Peniche .
“It exposed a trafficking network which the detained person is part of and is surely the coordinator of trafficking activities in that region,” he told reporters last week.
Palmira faces human trafficking charges in the form of sexual exploitation and prostitution . She was arrested in late September in Parral and she appeared in court last week.
Mexican media have reported that Palmira allegedly used social media to promote a “catalog” of women for potential “clients”.
The prosecutor’s office said the authenticity of the catalog has not been verified but said social media has been used in human trafficking cases in Chihuahua .
“It’s a factor that makes women and girls vulnerable,” she said. “It makes us an easy target.”
gm