Coding the Future

The Allende Massacre In Mexico A Decade Of Impunity National

the Allende Massacre In Mexico A Decade Of Impunity National
the Allende Massacre In Mexico A Decade Of Impunity National

The Allende Massacre In Mexico A Decade Of Impunity National The allende massacre: a decade of impunity. by michael evans. on the night of march 20, 2011, four firefighters arrived at a ranch along a stretch of rural highway linking the northern mexico towns of allende and villa unión. inside the gate, a small building was burning. Note: the ten year anniversary of the allende massacre was last month. borderland beat is sharing an extensive publication released in march 2021 by the us national security archive. it includes unseen and declassified archives, testimonies, and photos of the investigation. dozens of houses were burned and destroyed during the attack.

the Allende Massacre In Mexico A Decade Of Impunity National
the Allende Massacre In Mexico A Decade Of Impunity National

The Allende Massacre In Mexico A Decade Of Impunity National Edited by michael evans. washington, d.c., march 18, 2021 – ten years ago, the mexican municipality of allende was the site of one of the worst human rights atrocities ever seen in the country: a three day wave of violence in which the criminal group known as los zetas kidnapped, murdered, and later burned the bodies of an estimated 300. The boys said they saw gerardo and our neighbors in front of the neighbors’ house. a truck came, carrying a lot of men with guns. the men forced the neighbors and gerardo into the truck and. In 2011, miguel Ángel treviño and his brother omar, two of the most wanted drug kingpins in mexico, sent members of the criminal syndicate zetas to murder and disappear entire families in allende, mexico. propublica's ginger thompson spent two years investigating the role of the us drug enforcement administration in the massacre by gaining the trust of the citizens in the town. A disturbing report released today by researchers at the prestigious colegio de mexico provides new details about a 2011 massacre in allende, a quiet mexican ranching town less than an hour’s drive from the united states, and suggests that many more people were killed in the incident than estimated by mexican authorities.

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