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  • 21
    Aug
    2012
    12:00pm, EDT

    International team to exhume 96 bodies in graves in Mexico

    By NBC News staff

    Argentinian forensic experts have traveled to southern Mexico to exhume 96 bodies thought to be those of Central Americans who died as they tried to get to the United States, according to local reports. 

    Six experts from The Argentine Forensic Anthropology Team (EAAF) are working with local and federal authorities in the cities of Tapachula and Ciudad Hidalgo in the state of Chiapas, Mexico's Proceso magazine reported on Monday. (Link to story in Spanish)

    The EAAF team, which plans to spend at least two months in Chiapas, arrived on Monday at a municipal cemetery in the city of Tapachula, along with medical, human rights and justice officials, as well as representatives of the Guatemalan, Honduran and Salvadoran consulates, Proceso added.


    The EAAF was asked to help identify the bodies in Chiapas -- the majority of which were placed in one communal grave by local medical officials -- by groups advocating for the rights of migrants, Proceso reported.

    Migration in the Americas: Mom works in US while family stays in el Salvador


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    In most of Mexico, the bodies of indigent or unidentified people who have died in care are buried in group graves, with five to 10 corpses placed on each level, according to a Mexico forensics expert who asked not to be identified.  

    Non-governmental EAAF was established in 1984 to investigate the cases of some 9,000 disappeared people in Argentina under the military government that ruled from 1976 to 1983. It now works around the world. 

    The teams will analyze DNA samples from the buried bodies and those provided by families searching their missing loved ones, Proceso reported. The cemeteries are on routes known to be used by Central American migrants.

    Migration in the Americas: The end of North America

    The organization Voces Mesoamericanas (Mesoamerican Voices) requested the government of Chiapas look in the tombs for many missing migrants, the magazine said.  

    The organization has also looked along the so-called migrant route for clues to the location of some 2,000 migrants thought to have died along the way to the United States, Proceso said. 

    Central American migrants protest targeting by Mexico gangs 

    It isn't known how many of the estimated 500,000 Central American migrants who pass through Mexico on their way to the United States actually make it to their destination, according to the Council on Hemispheric Affairs.

    Many migrants are preyed on by criminal gangs and suffer assault, sexual slavery, kidnapping and murder, the organization added.

    The EAAF, Mesoamerican Voices and local officials in Chiapas were not immediately available for comment.  

    NBC News' F. Brinley Bruton contributed to this report.

    More world stories from NBC News:

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    • Tropical Storm Helene slams Mexico; Hurricane Gordon heads for Azores

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    71 comments

    If they werent in pursuit of committing a criminal act......theyd probably still be alive.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: guatemala, central-america, migrant, el-salvador, honduras, featured, chiapas, eaaf
  • 7
    Feb
    2012
    10:11am, EST

    Deadliest crash in years kills 11 in Canada

    By msnbc.com and news services

    HAMPSTEAD, Ontario -- Ten migrant farm workers from Peru were killed when a flat bed hit a passenger van in rural Canada on Monday afternoon, police and the workers' employer said. The truck driver also was killed.

    Three other passengers were critically injured, The Globe and Mail reported.


    The crash, the deadliest in Ontario since 1999,  will leave at least 10 families in another country without a breadwinner, according to the Globe and Mail.

    20 years for driver in DUI crash that killed nun

    Police said one survivor was airlifted to a hospital with life-threatening injuries, and two others were seriously injured.

    "On behalf of 13 million Ontarians, I want to offer our deepest condolences to those who lost a loved one and to offer our most sincere prayers for those taken to hospital," Premier Dalton McGuinty said in a statement.

    No names of the victims have been released. Albert Burgers, who owns the farm where the workers were Monday before the crash, said some had been with his crew for more than 10 years.

    Police told the CEO of the truck company, Speedy Transport, that the van apparently went through a stop sign and was hit by the truck.

    911 calls released after horrific Fla. pileup

    The impact sent the van hurtling across a lawn before smashing into a house. The van's passenger side was nearly ripped off.

    "I've been on the job for 28 years and I’ve never seen anything like it," Inspector Steve Porter told the newspaper as he stood near the scene after dark.

    Msnbc.com staff and The Associated contributed to this report.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • US shutters embassy in Syria, withdraws all personnel
    • 'Death to Christians': Suspected Jewish extremists deface monastery
    • US levies new sanctions on Iran's Central Bank
    • Israel PM: Palestinian reconciliation deal abandons 'way of peace'
    • 3 dead, dozens missing after blast at Pakistan factory
    • US tour guide recounts kidnapping in Egypt
    • Anti-Putin protesters: Bitter cold and big questions

     

    21 comments

    Reading the article it says nothing about anybody not being able to "speak the language and read road signs". English-speaking Americans run stop signs and kill people everyday (drinking and driving, texting, etc.). Don't be so quick to judge.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: canada, farm, peru, crash, car, workers, migrant, featured

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