The Senate is filled with complaints (and some irony)
The Glorieta Collective of the Disappeared decided that, if the Mexican Senate wants to play “nothing happens”, they would put up a giant “closed due to denial” sign. The reason: legislators ignored the accusations of the UN Committee on Enforced Disappearances (CED), which basically said “hey, this is a humanitarian emergency, not an episode of ‘Stranger Things’.”
Political level denialism
While the relatives of the disappeared demanded answers, the president of the Senate, Gerardo Fernández Noroña, released the gem of the year: he accused the CED of wanting to “derail the government” of Claudia Sheinbaum. Yes, because clearly the victims are behind a political thriller and not, I don’t know, finding their loved ones. Plot twist? The CED could take the case to the UN General Assembly if it confirms systematic patterns of disappearances. Spoiler: Mexico does not want that ending.
As if that were not enough, the groups also met with the Secretary of the Interior, Rosa Icela Rodríguez, to ask for the head of Teresa Reyes (head of Search) and criticize Rosario Piedra Ibarra (CNDH), who was conspicuous by her absence. Priorities, right?
Article 34: when the UN says “enough is enough”
For those who are not familiar with article 34 (no, it is not a meme), it allows the CED to escalate the issue to the UN if a State practices disappearances in a generalized manner. Translation: If Mexico continues in its “we don’t see, we don’t hear” saga, it could end up in the international spotlight. And not exactly for a Grammy.
Meanwhile, the Glorieta Collective thanked the CED for its support and recalled, with all the irony in the world, that the Mexican State continues to show no real will to resolve this crisis. But hey, at least the Senate now has its symbolic protest for the file.
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