User:Hlnmnucla/Femicide in Mexico

Graffiti on Buildings to protest femicide.

Femicide in Mexico edit

Femicide is the act of murdering women, because they are women. Mexico, particularly in Ciudad Juárez, is one of the leading countries in the amount of feminicides that occur each year, with as much as 3% of murder victims being classified as feminicide with approximately 1,000 feminicide in 2021, out of 34,000 murder victims. Mexico is also among the leading country in term of murders Murder rate , and 90% of the victims of murder are men. This escalation of violence began in the early 1990s and was followed by a wave of sexual violence and torture, abductions, increasing rates of women being murdered because of their gender. While the number of women murdered in Mexico has grown substantially in recent years, the proportion of female victims of homicide has not actually changed much over the last few decades. According to INEGI (Instituto Nacional de Estadística y Geografía) , the ratio of homicides targeting women hovered between 10-13% from 1990 to 2020.

In their attempts to understand the causes of this brutality - up to one third of the women victim of murder are murdered by their current or ex partners - researchers found that to be the majority of murders.  Additionally, the violence is also a result of what is known as the backlash theory, an alleged phenomenon in which when a marginalized group gains more rights within their society, there is a violent backlash from their oppressors. The response from the Mexican government has been relatively minimal as there is very little legislation protecting women. The lack of response also serves as a form of controlling women and quelling feminist movements as exacerbates fear of violence. Of course the lack of response on the 90% other murders, including 420 police officers, is probably indicative of something too, but does not fit the narrative of the 'researcher'. Local police and government officials are known to dismiss instances of women going missing and in some cases have been found to be in connection with various instances of violence against women. There have been many small feminist movements that have attempted to bring attention to the level of violence that Mexican women face. These movements primarily focus their efforts through demonstrations, sharing their own experiences, and creating works of art to express their frustrations.

Mexico officially began documenting the amount of femicide occurrences in 2012. The country's femicide rate exceeded more than 1,000 femicides in the year 2021 out of 3,400 woman victims and out of 34,000 overall victims, so roughly 3% of the victims. The reports gathered over the last few years displays that on average, 10 girls or women and 100 boys and men are killed daily in Mexico and 3 of them were feminicide. The high murder rate in the country has continued to make international news, while directing attention to Mexico's President Andrés Manuel López Obrador's decision-making abilities to maintain criminal activity to a minimum. Since 2015,1.7 million investigations have been opened by the Mexican government, for beatings, burns, and, injuries towards women. Only 781 were labeled as femicide. The rest were labeled as injury or domestic abuse, crimes that are not felonies. This is far from the truth, as the voices of Mexico state otherwise.[1] Since 2015 to 2021, there has been a 135% increase in femicide cases in Mexico. [2]

Risk factors and roadblocks edit

Violence against women, that is, violence specifically against women and girls by men and boys on the basis of the victim's gender, is the result of misogyny and sexist discrimination.  Feminist movements have been active in bringing attention to the problem of femicide, but the rates still continue to climb, especially among Indigenous women.  One hypothesis posited for the rate of growth in femicides is that as Mexican women gained more autonomy within patriarchal society, men who hold misogynist beliefs respond violently in an effort to maintain their own social power. Furthermore, while femicide and gender based violence is an issue that impacts all women, there are certain risk factors that have led to some women facing a disproportionate amount of violence. Low-income women and Indigenous women in particular are more likely to be victims of femicide than their wealthier peers. Geography is a primary obstacle in violence, including femicide, faced by Indigenous women, as offices that report these instances are not located near Indigenous communities. This leads to under-reporting and subsequently makes it more challenging to quantify the level of violence against these women. Other roadblocks to quantifying the violence Mexican women experience is a general misunderstanding of what femicide is. Many people view femicide as the same as any other kind of murder, rather than a targeted attack on the basis of gender. This conflation of femicide with other kinds of violence erases the gendered aspect and therefore the motivations specific to femicide. Women who worked in the Maquiladora these women would go to work at 5am and would leave close to midnight, which made them vulnerable to attacks and any other dangers. The government assured that these women were safe leaving and going to work in Juarez, but no official assurance was released that stated how these women were being kept safe. [3]

Feminist movements edit

Until recent[when?] decades, feminism was treated as a dirty word. As the violence rose in Mexico this sentiment faded. As more women became victims to violence the general disdain towards feminism and its ideals became less common among women and many began fighting for justice of murdered women. Mexican women began to take to the streets to march in large demonstrations. These marches called for the acknowledgement of the gender based violence women face. Mexican feminists created the term "feminicidio" (femicide) to describe the way some women are murdered because they are women. They urged their community members to recognize this kind of violence deviates from other kinds of murder and see it as a different issue. The main participants in this movement are the loved ones of those who have been victims of femicide. Their loved ones use various forms of media to spread the stories of those who lost their lives in the violence. Their efforts birthed many organizations that act to keep women in Mexico safe from violence as well as informed about it. Social media and the #MeToo movement transformed the movement through changing the culture of shame and fear that came with coming forward about sexual violence. Women naming their abusers publicly became normalized as a result.

As a result of the low investigations being conducted, women in Mexico have started a movement and saying called Ni una menos. This movement has become a global known saying, and has gained traction and popularity. This saying means Not One More, which means not another woman showed me murdered at the hands of femicides. This movement has been featured in Bad Bunny's music video Yo Perreo Sola, which has gained over 600 million views. This video supports the movement as the saying Ni Una Menos is shown in the background as Bad Bunny dances. He brings awareness and attention to the issue of women being abused and murdered.

Police response edit

The response to the increase in violence from both the local police and Mexican government has been consistently inadequate.[according to whom?] Police officers are known to downplay instances of women going missing. and to be slow to respond to reports of violence or missing people. These sluggish responses result in death as time is of the essence in disappearance cases. Additionally, actual investigations are often not conducted properly which compromises their integrity, ultimately making it more difficult for victims to get justice. Crime scenes do not get sealed, autopsies are mishandled, and victims do not get identified. In the case of prosecution, people are tortured into giving false confessions to take accountability for more murders than they are responsible for. Falsification of evidence also contributes to innocent people being arrested. In many places in Mexico, police officers themselves have been found to be in connection with the murders. Furthermore, victims are frequently blamed for their deaths and families perspectives of their deceased loved ones are treated with skepticism.

Femicides as well as other kinds of gender based violence are allowed to occur by the Mexican government to because it makes women afraid, with the intention of preventing feminist movements as well as any kind of further liberation for Mexican women. Police officers turn a blind eye and politicians do not create regulations to protect women because letting the violence occur reinforces patriarchal standards. When women are more focused on fearing for their lives, activist circles are more difficult to sustain.

Activists in Mexico as well as other human rights organizations have criticized the Mexican government for its conduct and claimed these actions are human rights violations. This is documented in the documentary On the Edge: The Femicide in Ciudad de Juarez: Documentary.

On the Edge: The Femicide in Ciudad de Juarez: Documentary edit

This documentary documents the lives of Mexican women who have disappeared and/or been killed in the Ciudad de Juarez. They depict how the government has turned a blindside to the disappearance of hundreds of women who are speculated to have been killed at the hands of their husbands or any male figure in their lives. This documentary demonstrates the truth of what it is like to be a woman in Mexico. It projects the sadness, anger, and frustration the families are enduring due to the neglect of their daughters from the government. Countless stories are told of Mexican women in Juarez, Mexico who have either never been found or found dead. Stories all too similar which starts off with a Mexican female from the city of Juarez disappearing and never being found. Some women's bodies are never found, and mothers are documented distress while the Mexican government states they'll conduct an investigation, but never do so. [4]

National protocols edit

Following the disappearance of Mónica Citlalli Díaz in a suburb of Mexico City in November, 2022, the Supreme Court President Arturo Zaldívar placed a national protocol to investigate all femicides along with all other homicides targeted towards women under any circumstance. Efforts have been previously made by certain states in Mexico to create prosecutor's offices specifically for gender-based crimes given the increasing numbers of homicides. Since 2015, the federal government declared multiple gender violence alerts in order to urge local, state and federal authorities to take the necessary emergency action in particular regions so that they could provide the public with vital security measures and justice for victims and affected communities.

References edit

  1. ^ ""We're here to tell it:" Mexican women break silence over femicides".
  2. ^ Adams, Olivia. "Understanding the dynamics of femicide in Mexico".
  3. ^ On the Edge: The Femicide in Ciudad de Juarez: Documentary
  4. ^ On the Edge: The Femicide in Ciudad de Juarez: Documentary