They find a new ‘extermination site’ with 14 graves in Reynosa, Tamaulipas • Security • Forbes Mexico

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A new “extermination site” with apparently 14 clandestine graves was located in Reynosa, state of Tamaulipas, according to Wednesday seeking disappeared mothers in Mexico.

The love group for the missing disseminated the location of several calcined human remains, with indications of “extreme violence”, in a land located on the banks of a road that leads to Monterrey, capital of the state of Nuevo León, border with the United States.

Love for the missing disseminated in their social networks that: “Extermination site is located with 14 concentrations of human bone remains with thermal exposure in Reynosa.”

The president of the group, Edith González, explained to the media that on the site they also found clothing, among other personal elements, “ballistic objects and tactical equipment of criminal groups.”

At the moment, neither the federal government, nor the state of Tamaulipas have officially commented on the finding.

An anonymous complaint about the possible existence of clandestine graves in that area led to the collective to mobilize to the region, guarded by agents of the National Guard and Personnel of the State Commission for the Search of Persons.

González revealed that, in recent years, the group has located a total “19 extermination sites” in the northern part of the country, -including the latter in Reynosa-, of which they have given notice to the authorities, without having a prompt response.

“The terrible thing is that these points are being reused by these criminal organizations, and obviously here annuls a possible identification. The problem is that the prosecutor’s agenda is very slow, ”he added.

The location of this site occurs after last Saturday, another missing search group spread the discovery of several clandestine pits and crematories found in a property located in the municipality of Teuchitlán, state of Jalisco, attributed to one of the drug trafficking posters.

In this regard, the Attorney General of the Republic, Alejandro Gertz Manero, considered “incredible” that local and state authorities had no knowledge of the site, and said he studies bringing the case to the Attorney General’s Office (FGR).

Mexico accumulates more than 120,000 missing people to date, according to data from the National Registry of Missing and not located (RNPDNO), which counts the disappearances recorded since the 1960s.

With EFE information.

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