From: Eric Rosenthal [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
Sent: Wednesday, July 22, 2015 2:31 PM
To: Arlene S Kanter <[log in to unmask]>
Subject: Corrected version: Abuse and torture in Mexico

 

 

 

Mexico authorities fail to protect children and adults with disabilities

from torture, trafficking and segregation

 

Corrected to address incorrect caption on photo.

 

A boy in restraints at Asociacion Hogar Infantil San Luis Gonzaga, IAP. Photo by Eric Rosenthal, DRI.

Mexico City - July 22, 2015 - Today, Disability Rights International (DRI) released a report
No Justice: Torture, Trafficking, and Segregation in Mexico. The report reveals the existence of a "blacklist" of institutions for children and adults with disabilities known to be abusive by Mexico City authorities - who nevertheless allow these facilities to continue operating without interference. "Mexico City authorities knowingly let perpetrators subject children and adults with disabilities to atrocious, life-threatening abuses. Without any safe, community supports available in Mexico City, however, survivors of abuse will remain in segregation in other institutions. There will be no justice in Mexico without significant reform," stated Eric Rosenthal, DRI's Executive Director.

The report focuses especially on the survivors of a blacklisted facility, Casa Esperanza, the site of torture, physical, and sexual abuse of individuals detained there against their will. Women reported being subject to sexual and physical abuse on a daily basis, and some were victims of trafficking. Women and girls were routinely sterilized. People were kept in cages, long-term restraints, and lived in degrading, unhygienic conditions without adequate medical care.

DRI reported these abuses to Mexican authorities in June 2014 but, for over a year, authorities failed to take action. In recent weeks, Mexican authorities have responded to pressure from DRI, the Mexico City Human Rights Commission, and the U.N., and shut down the institution.

"There is no safe place for the survivors of Esperanza to go. Every day that Mexico denies the right of persons with disabilities to live in the community marks another day in which Mexico is out of step with our international human rights obligations" said Humberto Guerrero of DRI.

"We demand justice for the survivors of Casa Esperanza and all women with disabilities who have been forcibly sterilized, raped, and trafficked. We call on Mexico City authorities to ensure that vulnerable individuals can live freely and with dignity in the community, rather than imprisoned in other institutions," said Priscila Rodriguez, of DRI.

"It's time for change in Mexico, and we will not stand by and watch another generation suffer torture and abuse in these horrific institutions," she concluded.

No Justice: Torture, Trafficking and Segregation in Mexico is available on DRI's website in Spanish and English.

 

 

 Like us on Facebook  Follow us on Twitter

 

Forward this email


This email was sent to [log in to unmask] by [log in to unmask] |  


Disability Rights International
| 1666 Connecticut Ave. | Suite 325 | Washington | DC | 20009

 

________________End of message________________

This Disability-Research Discussion list is managed by the Centre for Disability Studies at the University of Leeds (www.leeds.ac.uk/disability-studies).

Enquiries about list administration should be sent to [log in to unmask]

Archives and tools are located at: www.jiscmail.ac.uk/lists/disability-research.html

You can VIEW, POST, JOIN and LEAVE the list by logging in to this web page.