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Central American migrants escape Mexico kidnapping

6 hours ago, June 22, 2015, Source

 

Migrants arrive at the Basilica of the Virgin of Guadalupe while holding crosses during an annual human rights protest in Mexico City on 18 April, 2015

Migrants have held marches to draw attention to the dangers they face in Mexico

 

Dozens of Central American migrants say they have managed to escape from a gang that abducted them in southern Mexico.

 

They migrants told police they had been held for hours by armed men who stopped their bus, but later fought back and broke free from their captors.

 

Kidnappings are common in Mexico with gangs often abducting migrants and forcing them to join their ranks.

 

Tens of thousands of migrants travel through Mexico on their way to the US every year.

 

Many are forcibly recruited into gangs. Others are held until their families pay for their release.

Escape

The migrants said armed men posing as members of the security forces boarded their bus near the town of Ocotlan, in the southern state of Oaxaca on Saturday.

 

The migrants say they were taken to a car pound where their captors stole their belongings and attacked at least one woman.

 

According to the migrants, after about six hours they overpowered the gang members, delivering kicks and punches.

 

Many then fled into the surrounding hills. Some came across a police patrol, which they attacked, reportedly thinking they were part of the gang that had kidnapped them.

 

At least 37 migrants were arrested by police and handed over to local migration authorities.

 

It is not clear how many people were held by the gang, but some local media put the number as high as 100.

 

Police said they were from Central America and had been trying to reach the US.

 

So far, none of the armed men who held the migrants captive have been caught.

Mexico rescues more than 100 kidnapped migrants

7 May 2015, From the section Latin America & Caribbean, Source

 

Ten-year-old Marco Carrasco, a migrant from Guatemala, stands outside the Basilica of the Virgin of Guadalupe while holding a cross during an annual human rights protest over Central American citizens crossing overland towards the United States, in Mexico City on 18 April 2015.

There have been protests in Mexico over the dangers that exist for Central American migrants

 

Police in Mexico have rescued more than 100 migrants kidnapped by a human trafficking gang near the capital.

 

Reports said some of the migrants had been held hostage for five weeks in a house in Mexico State.

 

Most of the victims were Central Americans, but they also included people from India and Sri Lanka.

 

The migrants had been trying to reach the US illegally when they were captured by a gang who demanded cash from their relatives.

 

Five human traffickers were arrested in the town of Axapusco after the raid on Wednesday, said government officials.

 

Nearly 100 agents were involved in the operation to rescue the victims, who included some 14 children.

 

Local media reported that those freed are from Guatemala (33), El Salvador (23), India (23), Honduras (18), and Sri Lanka (five).

Electric fence

Police said they had been alerted by a Guatemalan man who had escaped from the house, but since their release some of the migrants have accused him of being in league with the people smugglers.

 

Alfredo Morquecho, head of Axapusco's security commission, told El Universal (in Spanish) that the migrants were in relatively good condition considering the circumstances.

 

The newspaper reported that the gang had installed an electrified wire fence around the property to prevent anyone from escaping.

 

The Mexican government has said it will repatriate the migrants.

 

Every year, thousands of people enter Mexico illegally to try and make their way into the US.

 

The journey is extremely dangerous and human rights organisations say that migrants are being increasingly targeted by criminal organisations.

 

In 2010, 72 migrants were massacred in Tamaulipas state and buried in shallow graves by the drug-trafficking cartel Los Zetas after their families failed to pay a ransom.

FM

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