"New York Times", October 18, 2009
Migrants Going North Now Risk Kidnappings
by Marc Lacey
TECATE, Mexico — For 37 days, the Salvadoran immigrant was held captive
in a crowded room near the border with scores of people, all of them
Central Americans who had been kidnapped while heading north, hoping to
cross into the United States. He finally got out in August, he said,
after the Mexican Army raided the house in the middle of the night to
free them.
“The army said: ‘Don’t run. We’re here to help you,’ ” recalled the
migrant, a 30-year-old father of three who insisted that his name not
be printed for fear of either being kidnapped again or deported. “I
kept running.”
Getting to “el norte” has never been a cakewalk. Along with long treks
through desert terrain, death-defying
river crossings and perilous
rides clinging onto trains, there have always been con men and crooked
police officers preying on migrants along the way.
But Mexican
human rights groups that monitor migration say the threats
foreigners face as they cross
Mexico for the United States have grown
significantly in recent months.
Organized crime groups have begun
taking aim at migrants as major sources of illicit revenue, even as the
financial crisis in the United States has reduced the number of people
willing to risk the journey.
Kidnapping people for ransom is a pervasive problem in this country,
although victims have typically been prosperous people with bank
accounts that can be emptied at the nearest A.T.M., or those with
relatives willing to hand over significant sums to save them.
Migrants may typically be poor, often with little in their pockets
except the scrawled telephone numbers of relatives who have migrated
before them, but they have usually notified friends or relatives in the
United States that they are on their way. To kidnappers, those contacts
are golden. “They beat me and kept beating me until I handed over my
telephone numbers,” said the Salvadoran immigrant, interviewed at a
center for migrants in
Reynosa, just across the border with
Texas.
In many ways, the man’s account was typical. A study by
Mexico’s
National Human Rights Commission released this year found 9,758
migrants who had been kidnapped as they tried to cross the border into
the United States between September 2008 and February 2009. The
commission noted that migrants were typically terrified to report such
crimes out of fear of being deported by Mexican immigration authorities
and that the actual number of victims was probably much higher.
The stories the commission heard in interviews with victims were
alarming. There were frequent rapes of female migrants. Fierce beatings
were carried out. As a lesson to other captives, the kidnappers killed
some migrants who did not hand over the telephone numbers of their
relatives.
“They said that if they did not receive payment, they would take away
my kidney afterward and throw me into the river so the big lizards
would eat me,” a Honduran man who was kidnapped in Tabasco State told
commission investigators.
He said he had been kidnapped along with 60 or so others, all Central
Americans. The men who took them said they were coyotes, or human
smugglers, and promised to feed them and help them cross into the
United States. Instead, the men forced the captives over 30 days to
call relatives in the United States and extract thousands of dollars
from them in order to be released.
The amounts demanded ranged from $1,500 to $10,000, sizable sums on top
of the several thousand dollars that the migrants had already paid
smugglers to make the crossing.
One victim, a Honduran man kidnapped in Nuevo Laredo at the Texas
border, told investigators that he was close to reaching the United
States when he fell for a swindle. Two women approached and offered him
a day job for about $10, money that he desperately needed.
But there was no job awaiting him at the house where he was taken.
Instead, he and a half dozen other migrants were beaten over the course
of two weeks and frequently photographed. The captors demanded the
e-mail addresses of relatives and sent the desperate-looking photos in
order to extract ransoms, he said.
The man said his relatives paid what the kidnappers had demanded, so he
and others who had come up with the ransom money were blindfolded one
evening and taken to the bank of a river. Dumped alongside them was the
body of a Salvadoran migrant whom the captors had killed. The
kidnappers fired several rounds at the ground and demanded that
everyone jump into the river, the man said. The group never made it
across, though, and was later picked up by the Mexican authorities.
Human rights workers say Mexican migrants are not singled out by
kidnappers as often as foreigners, mostly Central Americans, but also
Ecuadoreans, Brazilians, Chileans and Peruvians. The foreigners are
more vulnerable, less familiar with their surroundings and less likely
to report what happened to them to the authorities, advocates say.
“If people don’t come forward, we don’t know the extent of the
problem,” said Angélica Martínez, a state prosecutor in Tecate, a
border town east of
Tijuana, where the authorities were pursuing a
kidnapper who goes by the nickname “
El Gato,” who was believed to prey
on migrants.
Complicating the problem, migrants complain that the police are
sometimes in league with the kidnappers, rounding up victims and
handing them over to kidnappers for a fee.
Mexican law enforcement
officials acknowledge that some individual officers may be involved in
organized crime, but they say the problem is not as widespread as often
portrayed and is being combated on a national level.
The Salvadoran victim who was kidnapped in Reynosa said he had first
been to the United States in 1999. He had stayed three years, working
in the fields and in a furniture store in
North Carolina, before
returning to
El Salvador. After what he had endured, he said he was
mulling whether to give up the opportunity of higher wages in the
United States and return home.
“There was danger of robbery back then,” he said of his first crossing
10 years ago. “It’s always been dangerous. But now it’s gotten even
worse. We’re poor and we’re trying to get ahead. We’re doing this for
our kids. I’d advise people to be careful and to pray to God.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/18/world/americas/18tecate.html?_r=1&th&emc=th