Mexico

Many Canadians know Mexico as a winter get-away, a tourism paradise. But the vast majority of Mexicans experience a very different reality.

Human Rights in Mexico

Poverty, discrimination and inequity mean that millions of Mexicans face insurmountable challenges to meet basic human needs with regard to food, water, housing, health and education. Yet those who mobilize in defence of these rights are repaid with threats and deadly attacks, particularly when their activism challenges powerful economic interests. The perpetrators are rarely brought to account, creating a climate of injustice which fuels more abuses.

In a January 2024 report to the United Nations, Amnesty International concludes that Mexico is “rushing headfirst into an abyss of human rights”.

A protest against gender-based violence in Toluca is met with a heavy police presence. Feminist protestors have been subjected to police attacks and gender-based violence. Photo: Amaresh V. Narro / Eyepix Group/Barcroft Media via Getty Images
A protest against gender-based violence in Toluca is met with a heavy police presence. Feminist protestors have been subjected to police attacks and gender-based violence. Photo: Amaresh V. Narro / Eyepix Group/Barcroft Media via Getty Images
Protestors march through Mexico City holding the images of students from a teacher training college in Ayotzinapa who were forcibly disappeared. Photo: Itzel Plascencia López / AI Mexico

Indicators of Mexico’s grave human rights crisis

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People registered as missing and disappeared between 1962 and the end of 2023.

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Including the high-profile case of 43 students from a teacher-training college in Ayotzinapa.

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Momen were killed between 2018 and 2023.

  • More than 114,000 people registered as missing and disappeared between 1962 and the end of 2023, including the high-profile case of 43 students from a teacher-training college in Ayotzinapa, a state crime involving the criminal group Guerreros Unidos and Mexican government officials, including members of the armed forces. Relatives searching for disappeared and missing people face enforced disappearance themselves, as well as threats and killings.
  • Ongoing reports of grave human rights violations, including widespread use of torture, extrajudicial executions and excessive use of force by army and navy personnel, amid a heavily militarized public security policy.
  • Routine violations of the rights of Indigenous peoples, including the right to free, prior and informed consent regarding resource extraction projects on Indigenous lands. Indigenous defenders of land and water continue to be threatened, attacked and killed. The criminal justice system is also often used as a deterrence mechanism for those protesting violations of Indigenous rights and territory. Leaders are accused with fabricated charges, threatened with jailing, and denied impartial justice.
  • An growing epidemic of gender-based violence against women. More than 20,000 women were killed between 2018 and 2023. Justice is rare. Investigations of femicides have been marked by shortcomings including loss of evidence, failure in applying a gender perspective, and threats to the victims’ families. The government has made dangerous false accusations slurring feminists and human rights defenders who protest against government inaction on gender-based violence. Security forces have violently repressed women protesters in a number of states, including with gender-based verbal and physical abuse and sexual violence.
  • Others exercising their right to peacefully protest also face violations of their rights, including stigmatization, repression, unnecessary or disproportionate use of force, threats, digital harassment, lack of due process and access to justice.
  • Attacks, intimidation and record levels of murders of journalists, creating a climate of fear that prevents the truth from being told.
  • Hundreds of thousands of migrants and asylum seekers have been detained in overcrowded immigration detention centres, subjected to discrimination and ill-treatment, and deported back to situations of risk. Authorities continue to collaborate with the US in implementing US policies that undermine the right to asylum and the principle of non-refoulement.

Canada and Mexico have long enjoyed a special relationship, cemented by a free trade agreement, the Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA), and cooperation in other key areas. Amnesty International Canada has repeatedly called for the protection of human rights to be the overriding priority for all of our engagement, particularly in light of the current crisis.

Take Action

Ensure truth and justice for the families of the disappeared with this letter writing action.

Mexico

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