Post by account_disabled on Feb 25, 2024 5:57:30 GMT
Three days later, on May 22, the federal ministerial authority took criminal action for the crime of Organized Crime and requested an arrest warrant for the crime of kidnapping, consigning him, along with nine other people, to the prison. maximum security prison in Puente Grande, in the state of Jalisco. Finally, on May 28, a formal prison order was issued for the crime of organized crime and on June 18 for the crime of kidnapping. Since May 2013, the activist and Chess teacher has been in prison. Mexico does not respond to UN recommendations The imprisonment of Enrique Guerrero, whose case was documented by the Fray Vitoria Human Rights Center, is one of the cases for which the United Nations (UN) Working Group on Arbitrary Detention issued five official opinions to the Mexican government. , in which it considers that there were arbitrary arrests and irregularities in the criminal proceedings of five human rights defenders.
The other four cases are: that of the Mayan journalist Pedro Canché; the Oaxacan activist Damián Gallardo Martínez; the lawyer defending indigenous rights, Librado Jacinto Baños Rodríguez; and Nestora Salgado, commander of the Olinalá community police, in the state of Guerrero. Although the opinions of the Working Group Bahamas Mobile Number List on Arbitrary Detention were issued between August 2014 and December 2015, different civil organizations denounced that Enrique Peña Nieto's Executive has not yet given an official response to any of the UN requests. , which concludes that these five people were arbitrarily detained and suffered torture, which is why it requested their immediate release, as well as reparation for the damage by the State.
In this sense, Yésica Sánchez Maya, from the Consortium for Dialogue and Equity of Oaxaca, who participated yesterday in the presentation Arbitrary detention in Mexico: pending of the Mexican State before the UN, pointed out that despite the fact that the United Nations officially notified its five recommendations to the Peña Nieto government, it "has not yet informed the families, civil organizations, or the UN, about the receipt of the communications." For this reason, the civil organizations that participated in the event, among which were Article 19, the Collective Against Torture and Impunity, as well as the CDH Fray Victoria, among others, urged the Mexican State “to report publicly on the follow-up that will be given to these five opinions” of the UN. Likewise, Yésica Sánchez asked the Ministry of the Interior to carry out a working group to establish “the mechanisms” from which the recommendations issued in the five UN opinions are complied with. “A first step must be the immediate release of those who remain in prison,” Sánchez stressed.
The other four cases are: that of the Mayan journalist Pedro Canché; the Oaxacan activist Damián Gallardo Martínez; the lawyer defending indigenous rights, Librado Jacinto Baños Rodríguez; and Nestora Salgado, commander of the Olinalá community police, in the state of Guerrero. Although the opinions of the Working Group Bahamas Mobile Number List on Arbitrary Detention were issued between August 2014 and December 2015, different civil organizations denounced that Enrique Peña Nieto's Executive has not yet given an official response to any of the UN requests. , which concludes that these five people were arbitrarily detained and suffered torture, which is why it requested their immediate release, as well as reparation for the damage by the State.
In this sense, Yésica Sánchez Maya, from the Consortium for Dialogue and Equity of Oaxaca, who participated yesterday in the presentation Arbitrary detention in Mexico: pending of the Mexican State before the UN, pointed out that despite the fact that the United Nations officially notified its five recommendations to the Peña Nieto government, it "has not yet informed the families, civil organizations, or the UN, about the receipt of the communications." For this reason, the civil organizations that participated in the event, among which were Article 19, the Collective Against Torture and Impunity, as well as the CDH Fray Victoria, among others, urged the Mexican State “to report publicly on the follow-up that will be given to these five opinions” of the UN. Likewise, Yésica Sánchez asked the Ministry of the Interior to carry out a working group to establish “the mechanisms” from which the recommendations issued in the five UN opinions are complied with. “A first step must be the immediate release of those who remain in prison,” Sánchez stressed.