The theater of justice has a new act
And this time, the seeking families do not come to beg. They come to demand accounts. Four impeachment requests are already on the table of the Chamber of Deputies, pointing directly to the head of the National Human Rights Commission, Rosario Piedra Ibarra.
The position? Total omission in their duties and zero support for victims. So, without anesthesia.
“We feel wronged, forgotten and offended,” say relatives. And it’s no wonder.
Representative Laura Ballesteros, from the Citizen Movement, led the movement. Not only did he support the complaints, but he called on more groups to join. Because when the pain is organized, the desks shake.
Behind the curtain: what’s happening?
Carlos Castro, spokesperson for Víctimas Unidas – a platform that brings together more than 20 organizations – made it clear: “We look for support in other powers because there is no dialogue with the Executive.” Searching mothers and fathers have knocked on doors that never open.
Cases like that of Alejandra Galván and Joel Flores are the thermometer of boredom. Real people, real stories, demanding that institutions do their job.
And meanwhile, the CNDH loses credibility. Defense organizations point out that it is no longer independent: it is an appendix of the government. Just when the UN High Commissioner, Volker Türk, is in Mexico reviewing the disappearance crisis.
The scene is set. Congress has the ball. The families have the papers. And Piedra Ibarra… well, she will have to explain why so many mothers continue searching alone.




