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Extradition delay is response for Mexico supporting Palestine: Israeli official

Extradition delay is response for Mexico supporting Palestine: Israeli official Why should we help Mexico? official asks about case of Ayotzinapa investigator Published on Friday, July 16, 2021 0share A request to Israel for the extradition of a former official accused of compromising the investigation into the disappearance of 43 students in Guerrero in 2014 is being delayed as punishment for Mexico’s support of Palestine, says a senior Israeli official. Mexico has requested the extradition of Tomás Zerón, head of the now-defunct Criminal Investigation Agency during the 2012-2018 government of former president Enrique Peña Nieto. He is accused of abduction, torture and tampering with evidence in the investigation into the September 2014 disappearance of the Ayotzinapa rural teachers college students, all of whom were presumably killed.

Mexico says 85,000 have disappeared since 2006

Mexico says 85,000 have disappeared since 2006 Today 02:35 am JST Today | 06:48 am JST MEXICO CITY The number of people who have disappeared in Mexico since the start of the country’s drug war now stands at 85,006, the government reported Thursday. The figure was part of a government report on searches for those who have disappeared between the start of 2006 and April 7. Assistant Secretary for Human Rights Alejandro Encinas said the largest number of bodies found so far in the current administration have been in the states of Jalisco, Sinaloa. Colima, Guanajuato and Sonora. Encinas said that clandestine grave sites continue to be found, “due to the increase in confrontations between criminal organizations in several regions of the country.”

Mexico says 85,000 disappeared since 2006

Mexico says 85,000 disappeared since 2006 by The Associated Press Last Updated Apr 8, 2021 at 1:44 pm EDT MEXICO CITY The number of people who have disappeared in Mexico since the start of the country’s drug war now stands at 85,006, the government reported Thursday. The figure was part of a government report on searches for those who have disappeared between the start of 2006 and April 7. Assistant Secretary for Human Rights Alejandro Encinas said the largest number of bodies found so far in the current administration have been in the states of Jalisco, Sinaloa. Colima, Guanajuato and Sonora. Encinas said that clandestine grave sites continue to be found, “due to the increase in confrontations between criminal organizations in several regions of the country.”

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