Tag: Mexico

  • 45 bags of human boy parts found by Mexico police in Jalisco

    45 bags of human boy parts found by Mexico police in Jalisco

    The police in Mexico have found 45 bags containing human parts in the western Mexican state of Jalisco during a search in that province.

    The search was conducted over reports of missing young people in the province according to local authorities in the country.

    Following the missing of two women and five men all aged around 30 years on May 20, authorities launched a search for them and discovered the bag containing the human parts.

    “Forty-five bags with human remains have been extracted that belong to both male and female people,” the state prosecutor’s office said in a statement.

    The gruesome discovery was made on Tuesday at the bottom of a 40-meter (120-foot) ravine in the municipality of Zapopan, a suburb of Guadalajara, a large industrial hub.

    The missing persons’ reports for each one had been made separately on different days, but investigators found that they all worked at the same call center.

    The call center was in the same area as where the human remains were discovered.

    Forensic experts have yet to determine the number of victims and their identities.

    Initial inquiries suggested the call center could have been involved in illegal activities, and local media reported that the authorities had found marijuana, a cloth and a cleaning rag with apparent blood stains as well as documents on possible commercial activities.

    But relatives of the missing persons have accused the authorities of seeking to criminalize the victims.

    In recent years, in different areas of Jalisco, human remains have been found in bags or in unmarked makeshift graves in the province.

    In 2021, in the municipality of Tonala, in Jalisco, some 70 bags with the human remains of 11 people were found.

    In 2019 also, the bodies of 29 people were found in 119 bags in an unpopulated area of Zapopan.

    Another case that sparked numerous protests in Jalisco was the disappearance, in March 2018, of three film students, whose remains were dissolved in acid.

    Similarly, in 2018, media reported that three Italians disappeared, allegedly handed over by police to the Jalisco New Generation cartel, to whom they had allegedly sold faulty machinery.

    The Italians have not been found despite massive searches by state and federal law enforcement.

    According to local media, in the first two months of this year alone, the remains of 33 people were found in five makeshift graves in the Guadalajara area.

    The Jalisco New Generation cartel operates in the state and is one of the most powerful organised crime groups in Mexico, and is embroiled in disputes with other drug syndicates.

    Mexico has recorded more than 340,000 murders and some 100,000 disappearances, the majority attributed to criminal organisations, since the launch of a controversial military anti-drug offensive in December 2006.

    Jalisco is a western Mexican state fringing the Pacific Ocean. The state is known for mariachi music and tequila, both of which reportedly originated here.

    The capital, Guadalajara, is peppered with colonial plazas and landmarks like the neoclassical Teatro Degollado and regal Guadalajara Cathedral, with its twin gold spires. The neighboring Palacio de Gobierno houses murals by Mexican artist José Clemente Orozco.

     

  • Judge drops sentence for Mexican woman convicted of killing rapist

    Judge drops sentence for Mexican woman convicted of killing rapist

    An indigenous woman in Mexico who was sentenced to six years and two months for killing her rapist may not go back to prison, as a judge suspended her sentence.

    The judge suspended criminal proceedings at the request of the public prosecutor’s office, which reviewed the case again and decided to withdraw the charges.

    The relatives of the deceased man can appeal.

    The woman, known as Roxana R, was found guilty on May 15 of using excessive force to defend herself against her rapist in 2021.

    According to the report, the woman, 23, first knocked the perpetrator unconscious, strangled him, and finally tried to dismember the body.

    She kept the body for at least 20 hours and then brought it to the street in a plastic bag.

    The court acknowledged that the woman acted in self-defence when she killed her attacker in 2021, but said she used excessive force.

    When the verdict came down, the woman said “it was my life or his life.”

    She said she feared for her life and “only wanted to defend her life from a rapist.”

    The single mother from the southern state of Oaxaca, who women’s organisations supported, spent nine months in pre-trial detention before being released for the duration of the trial.

  • Record-breaking World Cup goalkeeper Carbajal dies aged 93

    Record-breaking World Cup goalkeeper Carbajal dies aged 93

    Former Mexico goalkeeper Antonio Carbajal, the first footballer to play in five World Cups, has died at the age of 93, local media announced on Tuesday.

    “Tota”, as Carbajal was known, appeared in goal for Mexico at the World Cups in Brazil 1950, Switzerland 1954, Sweden 1958, Chile 1962 and England 1966.

    He made 11 caps for his country from these competitions.

    Carbajal held the record of playing in five World Cups for 32 years until 1998 when German midfielder Lothar Matthaus reached the mark.

    Carbajal’s compatriots Rafael Marquez and Andres Guardado, along with Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo, have also since equalled his record.

    Although Carbajal said he was scouted by Real Madrid between 1950 and 1954, the Mexican never left his domestic league.

    He played most of his career in his hometown with Club Leon.

  • When the American fox complains about the Mexican dog – By Owei Lakemfa

    When the American fox complains about the Mexican dog – By Owei Lakemfa

    MEXICO has drug cartels which can also be violent. One of the most infamous drug lords, Joaquin Archivaldo ‘El-Chapo’ Guzman, former leader of the Sinaloa Cartel is serving a life sentence in the United States, US. The drug cartels are a problem to Mexico which has other related challenges. First is the seeming insatiable appetite of Americans for drugs which provides a ready market.

    The second is the ceaseless flow of arms from the US to Mexico; some half a million annually, which arms the cartels, and make them difficult to bring down. However, the solution of some American leaders is not to tackle these challenges, but to militarily invade neigbouring Mexico allegedly to take out the drug cartels and cut down insecurity.

    On March 15, 2023, Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene from Georgia tweeted: “Our US military needs to take action against the Mexican cartels.” She was reacting to a claimed explosive device wrapped in duct tape thrown from Mexico, which turned out to be sand. That she was wrong on the alleged explosive did not deter her from the campaign to invade a sovereign country. Two months earlier, 39-year-old Representative Daniel Reed Crenshaw of Texas Second Congressional District and a former Navy SEAL, had introduced a bill to “authorise the use of United States Armed Forces against those responsible for trafficking fentanyl or a fentanyl-related substance into the United States or carrying out other related activities that cause regional destabilisation in the Western Hemisphere.”

    As if on cue, former American Attorney General, William P. Barr in a piece titled: “The U.S. must defeat Mexico’s drug cartels” in the March 2, 2023 issue of the Wall Street Journal thundered: “America can no longer tolerate narco-terrorist cartels. Operating from havens in Mexico, their production of deadly drugs on an industrial scale is flooding our country with this poison. The time is long past to deal with this outrage decisively. Reps. Dan Crenshaw (R., Texas) and Michael Waltz (R., Fla.) have proposed a joint resolution giving the president authority to use the U.S. military against these cartels in Mexico. This is a necessary step and puts the focus where it must be.”

    The next day, Senators Lindsey Graham, South Carolina, and John Kennedy, Louisiana, demanded the US invades Mexico. Graham said: “Drug cartels in Mexico have been terrorising Americans for decades. We are going to unleash the fury and might of the U.S. against these cartels. We are going to destroy their business model and their lifestyle because our national security and the security of the United States as a whole depends on us taking this decisive action (we will) give the military the authority to go after these organisations wherever they exist. Not to invade Mexico. Not to shoot Mexican airplanes down. But to destroy drug labs that are poisoning Americans.”

    Interesting. American politicians want to teach the world how to militarily attack alleged drug laboratories spread across neigbourhoods in a sovereign country without invading the country. It is the classic case of wanting to make omelette without cracking an egg. So what would the Mexicans be doing, watching civilians killed in their homes and in crossfire without coming to the defence of their innocent citizens? Conversely, will the US allow or watch the Mexican military attack alleged drug cartels in America?

    The irony is that the most insecure country in the region, and one of the most insecure in the world is the US. Apart from other violent crimes, in the last 14 weeks, it has witnessed more than 160 mass shootings with each of those taking at least four lives. Just this Saturday, April 15, Alexis Dowdell was holding her Sweet Sixteen Birthday in Alabama. There were rumours that somebody at the party had a gun. The rumours filtered into her home, and her 18-year-old brother Phil, came to get her. LaTonya Allen, her mother also arrived, turned on the lights, went to the DJ booth and announced that whoever had a firearm should leave the party. Since nobody spoke, she turned off the lights to allow the party go on.

    Then, gunfire erupted. Alexis whose brother pushed her down when the guns began to boom said: “All of a sudden you hear gunshots and you just see everybody running towards the door and people falling and screaming.” After the shooting died down, four persons, including her brother, lay dead with 32 injured. Another set of sacrificial lambs for the American gun culture in which for profit, lives and limbs are ceaselessly sacrificed to the gods of the gun industry. To clarify, the overwhelming majority of Americans are against the free flow of arms. In fact, 67 per cent of Americans support a ban on military and assault-style weapons. But they face an overfed war industry that makes huge profits from virtually unrestrained arms trade. So, the populace is forced to go into periodic mourning of children and teenagers, young and old, men and women cut down in the insanity called gun violence.

    The US gun culture is a suicidal one from the country that needs to be saved from itself; America has a population of 331.9 million but with 393 million guns in private hands or 120.5 firearms for every 100 American residents. This is about 46 per cent of the total firearms in civilian hands worldwide. The US military itself, holds 4.5 million firearms. In contrast, China with a 1.412 billion population or four and half times the American population, has 49.7 million guns in private hands. While there are all sorts of gun markets in US, Mexico has only one gun store from which people can buy firearms legally.

    The American campaign to take out drug laboratories in Mexico is a mere camouflage to invade a neighbour it cannot control and whose President Andre Manuel Lopez Obrador is quite popular. It is also an attempt by American companies to seize Mexico’s resources and turn that country into their own market. The Americans have not forgotten that large swaths of their country like Texas and California were taken by force from Mexico. Some of their politicians might be seeking new ways to place their hands on more Mexican territories.

    The fact is that a new world economic and political order is evolving and the American empire might soon lose its dollar, economic, financial and military dominance. Nobody should expect it to go down peacefully and quietly; its establishment would put up a struggle, including overthrowing non-compliant governments and invading other countries. The current campaign to invade Mexico on the excuse that it has violent drug gangs may just be the first step in its attempts to stem the tide of history.

  • Super Falcons lose 0-1 to Mexico at Revelation Cup

    Super Falcons lose 0-1 to Mexico at Revelation Cup

    The Super Falcons on Wednesday at the ongoing Revelation Cup tournament lost 0-1 to hosts Mexico.

    The game played at the Leon Stadium was part of their preparations for the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup in August.

    The Nigerian senior women football team tried to create goalscoring opportunities through Rasheedat Ajibade and Ifeoma Onumonu, but they were unable to turn them into goals.

    In the 85th minute however, Kiana Palacios broke the deadlock to score the only goal of the game.

    Nigeria will face Columbia on Saturday in their second match of the tournament, before meeting Costa Rica on Tuesday.

  • FIFA confirms U.S., Mexico, Canada automatically in 2026 World Cup

    FIFA confirms U.S., Mexico, Canada automatically in 2026 World Cup

    The men’s national football team of the U.S., along with those of Mexico and Canada, will automatically qualify for the 2026 FIFA World Cup finals.

    The three countries won the right to host the World Cup in a united North American bid.

    FIFA historically has given host nations the right to play in the World Cup without going through the usual qualification tournaments.

    But this is the first time FIFA had to set aside three host bids, with the tournament billed to expand from 32 teams to 48 in 2026.

    Another three berths will now be awarded to CONCACAF nations via qualifying.

    FIFA released a statement on Tuesday saying: “In addition, the FIFA Council confirmed that, in line with the long-standing tradition of having all hosts competing at the FIFA World Cup, as well as sporting and operational considerations, the hosts of the FIFA World Cup 2026, namely Canada, Mexico and the USA, will qualify automatically for the final round of the competition.

    “Their slots will therefore be deducted from the overall allocation of six assigned to CONCACAF.”

    While the U.S. and Mexico tend to qualify for most World Cups, it was good news for Canada.

    Their men’s national team broke a 36-year drought between World Cup appearances when it qualified for Qatar in 2022.

    Canada however lost all three of its group-stage matches.

    The FIFA Council also determined its time-table for bidding for the right to host the 2030 World Cup, saying it will make its decision next year.

    That meeting will be separate from FIFA’s meeting to select a host for the 2027 Women’s World Cup, which will be held first, earlier in 2024.

    There are three confirmed bids for 2030 hosting duties.

    These are a South American joint bid featuring Uruguay, Argentina, Paraguay and Chile; a Spain-Portugal joint bid that added war-torn Ukraine last year; and a lone-country bid from Morocco.

  • Waldrum picks Ebi, Oshoala, 21 others for Revelation Cup in Mexico

    Waldrum picks Ebi, Oshoala, 21 others for Revelation Cup in Mexico

    Hosts Mexico, Nigeria, Costa Rica and Colombia are the participating teams at the tournament in the State of Guanajuato, with matches between 15th – 21st February, and with the objective of preparing the contestants for the 9th FIFA Women’s World Cup finals in Australia and New Zealand this summer.

    Nine -time African champions Nigeria will play their first game of the tournament against hosts Mexico starting at 4pm Mexico time (10pm Nigeria time) on Wednesday, 15th February, three hours after the opening match between Costa Rica and Colombia.

    On Saturday, 18th February, the Falcons will be up against Colombia at 1pm Mexico time (7pm Nigeria time), before Costa Rica square up against the host nation.

    Costa Rica will be Nigeria’s last opponents, both teams locking horns as from 5pm Mexico time (11pm Nigeria time) on Tuesday 21st February, before hosts Mexico and Colombia draw the curtain on the four-nation tourney.

    Nigeria’s delegation to the tournament will depart the country’s shores on Saturday, 11th February.

    The Super Falcons will tackle co-hosts Australia, Olympic champions Canada and debutants Republic of Ireland at what will be the biggest FIFA Women’s World Cup finals ever, this summer in Australia and New Zealand.

    ALL THE INVITED PLAYERS:

    Goalkeepers: Chiamaka Nnadozie (Paris FC, France); Yewande Balogun (AS Saint-Etienne, France)

    Defenders: Onome Ebi (Levante Las Planas (Spain); Osinachi Ohale (Deportivo Alaves, Spain); Ashleigh Plumptre (Leicester City, England); Glory Ogbonna (ALG Spor, Turkey); Rofiat Imuran (Stade de Reims, France); Michelle Alozie (Houston Dash, USA); Oluwatosin Demehin (Stade de Reims, France); Akudo Ogbonna (Rivers Angels)

    Midfielders: Halimatu Ayinde (FC Rosengard, Sweden); Christy Ucheibe (SL Benfica, Portugal); Ngozi Okobi-Okeoghene (Eskilstuna United, Sweden); Rasheedat Ajibade (Atletico Madrid, Spain); Toni Payne (Sevilla FC, Spain); Jennifer Echegini (Florida State University, USA); Regina Otu (AS Saint-Etienne, France)

    Forwards: Asisat Oshoala (Barcelona Femenin, Spain); Esther Okoronkwo (AS Saint-Etienne, France); Ifeoma Onumonu (NY/NJ Gotham FC, USA); Chinwendu Ihezuo (Rayadas Monterrey, Mexico); Francisca Ordega (CSKA Moscow, Russia); Uchenna Kanu (Tigres Femenil, Mexico)

  • How cops uncovered 100 corpses in warehouse notorious cartel used as victim graveyard

    How cops uncovered 100 corpses in warehouse notorious cartel used as victim graveyard

    Police have found 100 corpses in a warehouse a notorious cartel used as a graveyard.

    Cops in Mexico made the grim discovery after arresting four alleged members of the Jalisco Nueva Generación Cartel, according to Noventa Grados.

    The warehouse, thought to be a dumping ground for victims of the organised crime gang, was raided by the Ixtapan de la Sal Regional Prosecutor’s Office, in the municipality of Tenango del Valle.

    Elohim Díaz Jiménez headed up a joint operation consisting of the Ministry of National Defense and the Ministry of Public Security, to conduct the search, The Mirror reports.

    A forensic team and mobile laboratory were dispatched to the scene in the La Joya neighbourhood to search for the remains of the deceased.

    The latest grisly discovery, comes after a number of gruesome finds in Mexico over recent weeks.

    Prosecutors announced that the bodies of five men were discovered in a village north of the formerly popular holiday destination of Acapulco on Monday.

  • How suspected gunmen cut eight-month baby out of womb, steal woman’s fetus

    How suspected gunmen cut eight-month baby out of womb, steal woman’s fetus

    Suspected gunmen have attacked and cut open an eight-month-pregnant woman identified as Rosa Isela Castro Vazquez, to steal her fetus in the Mexican state of Veracruz.

    According to the authorities, the twenty-year-old woman was attacked by two assailants on Monday, but her unborn baby was retrieved alive.

    It was gathered that victim was abducted by two suspects who cut the baby out of her womb and dumped her body in Medellin del Bravo, in the Mexican state of Veracruz.

    However, police arrested the suspected criminals – a man and woman — after learning there was a newborn baby in their possession as disclosed by the attorney general’s office in the eastern state of Veracruz.

    They allegedly sliced open the victim to remove the fetus because the woman attacker was unable to have children herself.

    The victim was lured to her death through social media with a promise of clothes for her baby, relatives told local media, which said that it was the third case of its kind in recent years.

    More than 3,700 women were murdered in violence-plagued Mexico in 2021, of which around 1,000 were classified as femicides, according to official figures.

    Ministerial Police arrested Gonzalo “N” and Veronica ‘N’ as alleged perpetrators of the crime of disappearance committed by individuals.’

    It used ‘N’ as practiced in Mexico to conceal a suspect’s full name due to local privacy laws.

    The alleged perpetrators were arrested with a newborn in their possession, the Attorney General’s office in the eastern state of Veracruz said in a statement.

    The suspects, a man and a woman, appeared before a judge on Monday accused of kidnapping and femicide.

    According to relatives of the victim, Rosa was lured to her death through social media with a promise of clothes for her baby.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) gathered that it was the third case of its kind in recent years.

    More than 3,700 women were murdered in violence-plagued Mexico in 2021, of which around 1,000 were classified as femicides, according to official figures.

  • Qatar 2022: Argentina defeat Poland 2-0 to progress to round of 16

    Qatar 2022: Argentina defeat Poland 2-0 to progress to round of 16

    Argentina booked a passage  to the round of 16 following their 2-0 over European nation Poland.

    Argentina began their campaign with a shock 2-1 defeat by the Saudis, before bouncing back with a 2-0 victory over Mexico – with captain Lionel Messi scoring once in each fixture – to put them on three points.

    The encounter seemed like it would end in a draw  after first half ended goalless.

    However, upon resumption, Brighton midfielder, Molina got to the byline and cut the ball back where Mac Allister was waiting – the 23-year-old didn’t make a clean connection as he swept it with his right foot, but the direction was perfect and just kissed the far post after passing Szczesny.

    Again, in the 67th minute, Enzo Fernandez drives at the defence and finds Alvaraz, who takes a touch, swivels and blasts a rocket into the top corner form a cool finish for the Argentina’s second goal.

    Argentina go through as Group C winners, while Poland sneak through in second place due to having a better goal difference than Mexico.

    They are through and will face Australia in the round of  16.

    Meanwhile, in the other group game, Mexico defeated Saudi Arabia by 2-1 but failed to secure qualification based on goal difference.

    The Mexicans needed a two goal difference to progress to the next round but could only secure a 2-1 win.