BajaNews - 6-22-2010 at 03:34 PM
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/20/world/americas/20mexico.ht...
By MARC LACEY
June 19, 2010
MEXICO CITY — With a drug war raging around them and an unreliable judicial system in place, Mexico’s human rights activists have their hands full as
they grapple with a growing new class of victims: themselves.
“I’m not going to be silenced,” insisted Silvia Vázquez Camacho, an activist from Tijuana, who is now in hiding after receiving a series of threats on
her life in recent months. Despite her bold declaration, the fear in her voice was palpable, and she acknowledged that she had been forced to take a
respite from her activism.
Mexico has a long history of cases in which the authorities, whether they wear badges or business suits, trample on the rights of the powerless.
Acknowledging that, the government 20 years ago created a formal commission to officially identify violations and recommend — but not order —
remedies. Citizens groups also rose up, however, to level the playing field and represent victims of wrongful arrests, torture, illegal land grabs and
numerous other transgressions.
But the system is being severely tested by what human rights activists say is a concerted attack on their rights. The new reality is that activists
now devote a considerable portion of their time helping other activists, who have been threatened or far worse.
“No one is protecting us,” said Juan Carlos Gutiérrez Contreras, director of the Mexican Commission for the Defense and Promotion of Human Rights.
“Human rights activists should be able to do their jobs. And we don’t just want protection. We want the government to investigate the threats.”
Amnesty International, in a recent report, outlined 15 cases of threats against Mexican human rights activists in recent years scattered across the
country. Although there are no precise tallies, human rights groups say that the number of activists who have been improperly singled out by the
police, soldiers and government officials is in the dozens.
In one of numerous new cases on file with Mexican human rights organizations, Ms. Vázquez and another woman, Blanca Mesina Nevarez, recently fled
Tijuana because they feared that their lives were in danger as a result of their work. The two activists had been representing 25 police officers who
had accused Mexican security forces of torturing them in early 2009 to force them to sign confessions saying that they were taking bribes. The
activists suspect that a group of rival Tijuana police officers are the ones threatening them.
The more vocal the activists were in raising the torture allegations, the more intense the response. First there were threatening phone calls. Then
police cars began turning up outside their homes and trailing them around the city. After Ms. Mesina testified at a hearing in Washington last fall of
the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, a man in a mask approached her and threatened to kill her.
Alarmed by the intimidation, the Inter-American Commission of Human Rights recently took on the case of the Tijuana activists, calling on the Mexican
government to beef up its protection measures for the two women, before it is too late.
For some, like Raúl Lucas Lucía, it already is. Mr. Lucas defended the rights of indigenous people in the state of Guerrero until he was abducted by
three men who claimed to be police officers in February 2009. “Keep quiet or we’ll kill your husband,” Mr. Lucas’s wife, Guadalupe Castro Morales, was
told in a phone call from someone who reached her on her husband’s cellphone. “This is happening to you because you’re defending Indians.”
Mr. Lucas’s body and that of a colleague, Manuel Ponce Rosas, were found seven days later. The case remains unsolved.
“Do you think you’re so brave?” a man in a car yelled at Obtilia Eugenio Manuel, the founder of an indigenous rights organization, also in Guerrero,
in another case compiled by Amnesty International. The man added, “If you don’t go to prison, we’ll kill you.”
She also received three death threats by text message on her cellphone, one of which warned her that no human rights group could save her. Responding
to her case and those of other activists in Guerrero, the international human rights commission, which is part of the Organization of American States,
called on the Mexican authorities to provide her and dozens of other activists with protection.
In another case, Cristina Auerbach Benavides, who campaigned on behalf of the families of 65 miners who died in a coal mine explosion in 2006, was
confronted more than once at her home in Mexico City by men who claimed to be police officers. The incidents occurred when the bodyguard assigned to
her by the Mexico City government was off duty.
“Mexico is a dangerous country in which to defend human rights,” said the Amnesty International report, which noted that there were many more cases in
the files of the country’s numerous human rights groups.
Activists working on cases connected to the drug war are particularly vulnerable because drug trafficking organizations, and their many accomplices in
police forces and governments, show little tolerance for criticism.
To be sure, human rights workers are by no means the sole targets. Crusading journalists have been silenced by shadowy gunmen. Politicians and police
officers who dared confront organized crime have lost their lives over it.
President Felipe Calderón has defended his government’s human rights record and described his antidrug offensive as an effort to protect the human
rights of all Mexicans against powerful criminals.
“Obviously we have a strong commitment to protect the human rights of everybody, the victims and even of the criminals themselves,” he said last
August in Guadalajara, with President Obama at his side, when questioned about human rights. “And anyone who says the contrary certainly would have to
prove this — any case, just one case, where the proper authority has not acted in the correct way.”
Human rights activists say they have stacks of cases. And they say that there is ample reason in Mexico to take death threats seriously.
In Ms. Mesina’s case, after she returned from Washington, she was followed by a mysterious black pickup truck with tinted windows and no license
plates. She drove her car into a parking lot to get away, and that is when a man dressed in black got out, with his face covered, and approached her.
“ ‘This is the last time I’m going to warn you to stop filing complaints in Tijuana,’ ” she recalled him saying in a stern warning that was laced with
expletives. “If I don’t kill you now it’s to avoid a scandal around the elections and because your case is already known internationally.”
Ms. Mesina, who became an activist to help free her father, who is one of the jailed Tijuana officers, and his colleagues, took the last part of that
threat as form of encouragement. More attention on the case, she said, might make it harder to kill her.
But Nik Steinberg, a researcher for Human Rights Watch who does work in Mexico, expresses some doubt. “One wonders, if the government will not even
protect defenders whose cases have attracted international intention, who will it protect?” he said.