BanderasNews
Puerto Vallarta Weather Report
Welcome to Puerto Vallarta's liveliest website!
Contact UsSearch
Why Vallarta?Vallarta WeddingsRestaurantsWeatherPhoto GalleriesToday's EventsMaps
 NEWS/HOME
 AROUND THE BAY
 AROUND THE REPUBLIC
 AROUND THE AMERICAS
 THE BIG PICTURE
 BUSINESS NEWS
 TECHNOLOGY NEWS
 WEIRD NEWS
 EDITORIALS
 ENTERTAINMENT
 VALLARTA LIVING
 PV REAL ESTATE
 TRAVEL / OUTDOORS
 HEALTH / BEAUTY
 SPORTS
 DAZED & CONFUSED
 PHOTOGRAPHY
 CLASSIFIEDS
 READERS CORNER
 BANDERAS NEWS TEAM
Sign up NOW!

Free Newsletter!
Puerto Vallarta News NetworkNews Around the Republic of Mexico | May 2006 

Women Alleged Sex Abuse by Mexican Police Following Clashes with Protesters
email this pageprint this pageemail usLisa J. Adams - Associated Press


“They did everything to us, but our faces were covered.” Read María Sastres and Cristina Valls' account below. (Eduard Bayer/Semanario Directa)
Mexico City – Mexico's human rights agency said Tuesday it has filed complaints with prosecutors after nearly two dozen women claimed they were raped or sexually abused by police following a violent protest.

The allegations are the most serious to arise against police – frequently accused of corruption and violence – during the administration of President Vicente Fox, said Guillermo Ibarra, coordinator-general of projects and communication for the Mexican National Human Rights Commission.

He said seven women reported that they were raped and 16 others, including three foreign nationals, said they were sexually abused by police who detained them after violent clashes last week in the town of San Salvador Atenco. Ibarra said his government panel has filed criminal complaints with the attorney general's office in the central state of Mexico, where local, state and federal police officers have been accused by the women in the alleged abuses.

Mexico State Police Chief Wilfrido Robledo denied the allegations in comments to local media, saying they were part of a strategy by detainees' lawyers to make police look bad. He could not be reached by The Associated Press for comment Tuesday.

Presidential spokesman Ruben Aguilar said if police committed crimes authorities must act “with the full force of the law.”

The women who lodged the rape and abuse charges were among more than 200 people taken into custody last week in San Salvador Atenco, where members of a radical group kidnapped and beat six policemen after they tried to prevent flower vendors from setting up stands in a nearby city.

Television images showed an aggressive police response the next day with angry officers clubbing detainees in the town, located 15 miles northeast of Mexico City.

Two of the women who claimed they were sexually abused, but not raped, are Spaniards, while the third is from Chile, Ibarra said. All were deported for allegedly violating the terms of their tourist visas.

“They insulted me, groped me, anything they wanted,” the Chilean, who identified herself as cinematography student Valentina Palma, was quoted by the daily La Jornada newspaper as saying.

Palma said she and other detainees were forced to walk through a gauntlet of police officers who kicked them as they passed.

Ibarra said both the commission and state police had appointed doctors to examine the women who remained in Mexico, but that more than half of the alleged victims so far have refused.
Spanish Women Tell of Abuse at the Hands of Mexican Police
Armando G. Tejeda - La Jornada

María Sastres y Cristina Valls are two Spanish citizens who, last Wednesday, found themselves in San Salvador de Atenco, when the conflict there sparked brutal repression by state and federal police forces. In addition to the tragic death of 14-year-old, Francisco Javier Cortés, the police operative was also shadowed by reports of human rights’ violations and disregard for due process, as is the case in this testimony.

Sastres and Valls denounced having been victims of insults and threats while in police custody, as well as having received no information as to their legal situation or their reason for being deported, despite being in the country legally, with active tourist visas.

At the end of their long trip from Mexico to Paris, and finally to Barcelona, where they live, the two Spaniards confessed to feeling “outraged” and “profoundly affected” by what happened last Wednesday, in San Salvador de Atenco.

Their testimony begins at dawn, on Wednesday, when they found themselves in Atenco: “We came to Mexico to work with indigenous communities in Chiapas, and later joined the Other Campaign, to work as human rights observers and photographers. When we found out what was happening in Atenco, we went there. We arrived at night and saw that the town was already surrounded by barricades. The police entered at about 6:00 AM.

According to Sastres and Valls, when word went out that the police had begun to attack the residents, fear and chaos spread throughout the town: “There were 3,000 police, and there were 300 of us. They came after us with everything: tear gas, bullets, everything. We ran all over town, trying to get away from the police, but there wasn’t a single street without police. But finally, a woman opened her door and let us hide in her house with eight other people.

The two Spaniards hid in the house for two hours listening to the police attack in the streets outside. Eventually, they were detained: “We could hear that the police were starting to bang on doors, supposedly looking for the police who had been taking hostage. That’s how they finally found us and grabbed us. They pushed our faces into the dirt. They covered our faces with hoods, and they bound our hands right there in the yard. They were asking for our names, they recorded us on video, and that’s when the first insults and beatings began.

The worst abuses came when they were put in a truck together with several dozen other people. “They put us in a truck, where they started beating us the whole time, hitting us with clubs and kicking us. They insulted us a lot, because we were Spanish, saying that we were with the ETA, calling us whores and many other things. Later they moved us to a bigger truck, where they accounted for all of us – I think there were 38 of us – and they abused the women sexually.

In reference to the sexual abuse that they suffered, Maria Sastres said: “They did everything to us, and since our faces were covered, we couldn’t see who they were. We could see the ground was covered in blood and we could hear people crying out in pain. I don’t want to go into a lot of detail about the sexual assault, but they took off our clothes, they tore them off us, lots of police put their hands all over us, and I would rather not say anything more. All of this happened in the truck on the way from Atenco to Toluca. If we tried to talk to anyone, they hit us, insulted us, and laughed at us.”

When they arrived in Toluca, the 40 people who had been in the truck were taken into Santiaguito prison, where – according to testimonies- the foreigners were separated from the Mexicans and divided by gender. Within five minutes of entering the prison, they uncovered our faces and took off the handcuffs, and since they had made my nose bleed, they also cleaned my face. But I arrived with my pants all torn, without a bra, with my shirt torn open, and with beatings all over my body,” said Maria Sastres.

After spending several hours in the prison, in the state of Mexico, all the foreigners were sent to the immigration office in Iztapalapa, where they were held for several hours without receiving any information about their situation. “We told the people at the prison, as well as the people at immigration, about how we had been treated, but they told us it wasn’t their problem, and they tried to be a little nicer. Nevertheless, they kept lying to us, and threatening us, saying we were going to have spend a year in prison.

“They didn’t tell us anything. Lawyers kept coming by who told us the same thing, that we were going to spend a long time in prison. So we started to think that they were going to invent something with which to frame us, and that we weren’t going to get out of prison.”

At the immigration office, the Spaniards were visited by the Spanish consul, to whom they also told of the abuses they had suffered, and who said he “would look into it.” But he didn’t get them any kind of legal assistance, except for informing their families in Spain, since up until that time they had not been able to make a single phone call.

“There was a point, at about 5:00 in the afternoon, when they took us out of the room to a car. We asked where we were going and they told us we were going to an office in Polanco, but the car took off and went straight to the airport. They told us that the police in Atenco had stolen all of our things, but they were laughing at us.”

Without any kind of legal assistance, Sastres and Valls were held in a kind of airport jail cell for several hours, where they were filmed and threatened again. Finally they were put on a plane to Paris: “The plane left at 11:00 at night, but we were accompanied by two police until we arrived in Barcelona.”



In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving
the included information for research and educational purposes • m3 © 2008 BanderasNews ® all rights reserved • carpe aestus