Mexico's SRE rejects UN report on enforced disappearances

The UN Committee against Enforced Disappearances requested support measures for Mexico to tackle disappearances that could be deemed crimes against humanity. Mexico's Foreign Relations Secretariat rejected the report as biased and for overlooking government progress. The committee points to over 6,200 bodies in clandestine graves as proof of the crisis.

The UN Committee against Enforced Disappearances (CED) urged the UN on Thursday to consider measures supporting Mexico's government in preventing, investigating, and eradicating enforced disappearances. CED President Juan Albán-Alencastro stated, "International law does not require crimes against humanity to occur on a national scale or be orchestrated from high government levels; what matters is the magnitude, pattern of attacks, and targeting of civilians."

The report notes ongoing discoveries of clandestine graves holding over 6,200 bodies and 76,000 human remains, mostly unidentified. The CED regrets that despite 2021 visits and adopted measures, the situation has not substantially improved, with authorities overwhelmed. Many disappearances link to the war on drugs by criminal groups, though some cases suggest public officials' involvement.

The request went to UN Secretary-General António Guterres for the General Assembly, suggesting technical cooperation, financial aid, and support for searches, forensic analysis, and probes into organized crime ties.

Mexico's Secretariat of Foreign Affairs (SRE) dismissed the report as "biased," noting it acknowledges no federal policy for systematic attacks. The current administration does not tolerate disappearances and has advanced reforms, the SRE said. Mexico welcomes international technical cooperation but not on premises misreflecting its reality.

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Mexican President Sheinbaum and Interior Secretary Rodríguez announce willingness to collaborate with UN High Commissioner on issue of disappeared persons.
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Mexico willing to collaborate with UN high commissioner on disappeared

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President Claudia Sheinbaum and Interior Secretary Rosa Icela Rodríguez expressed Mexico's government willingness to collaborate with UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk during his visit next week. Türk will meet with officials, disappeared persons' collectives, and organizations. The announcement comes amid disagreements with a UN Committee against Enforced Disappearance report.

Mexico's National Human Rights Commission (CNDH) rejected on Saturday, April 4, the conclusions of the UN Committee against Forced Disappearances on the situation in Mexico. It accused the international body of a biased reading lacking historical perspective. The CNDH defended the Mexican state's efforts in searching for missing persons.

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The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) is preparing a specific report on Mexico's missing persons crisis, with 133,601 people reported missing or unlocated. The document is part of the 2025 regional balance and highlights the State of Mexico, Jalisco, and Tamaulipas as having the highest figures. The IACHR describes the situation as a grave humanitarian crisis.

President Claudia Sheinbaum responded on May 7 to Donald Trump's warnings of possible U.S. intervention against cartels in Mexico, demanding the extradition of four people linked to huachicol.

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Volunteers have uncovered more than 1,000 bone fragments near Lake Chalco in eastern Mexico City, building on authorities' earlier discovery of 317 remains from at least three people. The findings, amid Mexico's drug war and ahead of World Cup matches, intensify calls for thorough investigations into the missing persons crisis.

United Nations Special Rapporteur Irene Khan has highlighted attacks on freedom of expression in the Philippines in her final report to the UN Human Rights Council.

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Federal and state authorities restored dialogue with communities in Chilapa, Guerrero, following an escalation of violence attributed to criminal groups that caused displacements.

 

 

 

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