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El Salvador Committee For Dead And Missing Migrants Champions Rights Of Those Returning South

El Salvador Dead Missing Migrants Committee

By DIEGO MENDEZ   07/14/11 01:55 PM ET   AP

SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador -- Hiding in the bushes, 17-year-old Marcelo Larin watched in terror as attackers raped a fellow migrant, a Guatemalan woman, near her naked, unconscious and machete-wounded husband.

Larin wasn't the only witness to the violence that day more than five years ago in the southern Mexican state of Chiapas. Other Central American migrants were also quietly waiting out the attack until they could rescue the Guatemalan couple. They finally helped the pair to a nearby highway and loaded them into a passing police car.

Larin is now back in his native El Salvador where he goes by the handle "Marcelo the Migrant" and spreads an urgent message to others thinking of trying their luck in the U.S.: Don't go, at least not without legal permission.

"When I'm in the schools, I talk as a kind of prevention," said Larin, now 22. "It's difficult to find opportunities in El Salvador, but there are some."

He works with the nonprofit Committee for Dead and Missing Migrants of El Salvador, which is the first of its kind in this Central American country, championing the rights of those who have survived and returned from the dangerous journey north.

Despite warnings from government officials and others, millions of Salvadoran migrants have hit the torturous road to the U.S. in search of the American dream. Many end up back home, penniless and debt-ridden.

The center's staff, which includes many ex-migrants, offers legal support and counseling to returnees. It's also investigated 309 cases of alleged human rights violations involving Salvadoran migrants as well as searched for those missing in Guatemala and Mexico.

"Many cases go unreported out of fear of reprisal and because most coyotes know the families of the victims," said committee director Lucia Gonzalez, using a slang term for smugglers hired to guide migrants.

Her office is covered with photographs of missing migrants, many with the question "Where are they?" written across their faces.

Such dangers have only grown in recent months as Mexican drug cartels escalate their war for control of smuggling routes into the U.S., which are often the same paths taken by migrants. Since November, hundreds of migrants, many of them from Central America, have been found dead in mass graves near the U.S.-Mexico border or trapped in stifling cargo trailers driven by smugglers.

Salvadorans were especially shocked by the discovery of 72 slain Central Americans in the northern Mexican state of Tamaulipas. Police suggested they were killed after resisting forced recruitment into the Zetas drug cartel.

The National Human Rights Commission of Mexico recorded 214 kidnapping events involving 11,333 migrants in just a six-month period last year.

That's spurred action from migrant rights groups elsewhere in the region, such as Frontera Sur in Chiapas state and Sin Fronteras in Mexico City. The violence has also dissuaded some Central Americans from leaving.

Mexico's National Migration Institute says 28,706 Guatemalans were deported from Mexico last year, making up the biggest group of deportees, with Honduran immigrants second and Salvadorans third.

Larin said he's working to make sure his countrymen don't end up as victims.

The rape in Chiapas served as a visceral reminder for Larin of the violence he was risking on his journey and ultimately helped convince him to cut short his trip.

So he made his way to the Mexican town of Arriaga and worked for months in a refuge that served migrants on their way north. He spent the next four years in various jobs in Mexico, from crafting dental prostheses to distributing fliers. He returned to El Salvador last year and is now enrolled in college.

"I tell people that it's better that we prepare ourselves here for when foreign companies come and ... not suffer loneliness, humiliation, kidnappings and in the worst cases, not be able to return to see their families," Larin said.

Between 75 and 85 percent of Salvadoran migrants who attempt the journey make it to the U.S., which means "between 15 and 25 percent are caught in transit," said Juan Jose Garcia, El Salvador's deputy foreign minister in charge of overseas Salvadorans.

Official figures show some 3 million Salvadorans live in the United States, sending an estimated $3.5 billion in remittances back home in 2010. That cash is an important source of revenue for the impoverished country of about 7 million people, where an estimated 48 percent of people lived below the poverty line in 2009.

"They're motivated by the lack of jobs and opportunities in our country," said Miguel Montenegro, a member of the non-governmental Human Rights Commission in El Salvador. "If there were opportunities here for everybody, they wouldn't make these decisions."

Most left El Salvador during a civil war that raged in the 1980s and killed tens of thousands. Because of that wartime experience, more than 200,000 Salvadorans have received temporary protected status since January 2001 from the U.S. government and been allowed to stay legally in the country.

Montenegro said Salvadorans who migrate illegally often bet everything on the journey.

"Most have to mortgage their homes, their piece of land or sell their belongings to pay the coyotes' fees," he said. "If they don't have the money, which runs between $6,000 to $7,000, they make the trip without help from the coyotes. These are the most at risk. They usually get kidnapped."

Gonzalez listed the known fates that have befallen migrants: Abandoned by smugglers, murdered by criminals, mutilated under the wheels of moving trains they failed to catch, trapped "in the hands of people who take advantage of their tragedy" and force them into prostitution.

While the casualty list grows, another trend has also emerged. More people, including ex-migrants such as Larin, are stepping up to do something, Gonzalez said:

"Always we find a friendly voice that gives us a hand to help the victims."

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SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador -- Hiding in the bushes, 17-year-old Marcelo Larin watched in terror as attackers raped a fellow migrant, a Guatemalan woman, near her naked, unconscious and machete-wounded ...
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador -- Hiding in the bushes, 17-year-old Marcelo Larin watched in terror as attackers raped a fellow migrant, a Guatemalan woman, near her naked, unconscious and machete-wounded ...
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This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
AZreb
equal-opportunity Independent heathen
08:47 AM on 07/19/2011
One of the harsh realities of the illegal acts of anyone who attempts to enter our country without following our laws. Human smuggling is a big money-maker for the cartels.

Interesting to note that this story is featured on the "world" page while the escape of 59 inmates from Ciudad Victoria - right on the border - is not featured. 35 were being held on federal charges - drug trafficking, armed gangs (cartels) and 5 guards fled at the time of the escape. One article said this is the same prison from which 350 escaped in 2010 - December. Seems like stories of escapes and killings, beheadings, hangings, dozens of bodies found buried in Mexico are either featured for a short time or buried in HP while the stories of the travails of the illegal aliens are front and center.
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Bonnie Larkin
Oathkeeper AND NRA member
02:55 PM on 07/18/2011
Lets hope his message catches on -
Just stay home !
01:35 PM on 07/18/2011
If all the good people leave a place it won't get better. Its a catch-22.
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Hare
One day closer to Utopia
09:10 PM on 07/17/2011
Survival of the species, not the immigrants but those who don't want them here for fear they will take over what they consider theirs, jobs, money, health, education, freedom etc. Its not hate but fear what drives them to not want these human beings to do what they need to do to survive, but like Darwin said there will always be a fight for survival.
10:55 AM on 07/19/2011
I'm guessing you've never actually read the Origin of Species or passed a Biological Anthology class.
08:28 PM on 07/17/2011
This is just one guy. he may be trying to dissuade people from trying their luck. Unfortunately, there are millions of others looking back across the border and saying "Come on in, the water's GREAT!"
02:39 PM on 07/17/2011
Typical Americans. Sons and daughters of immigrants who came here for a better life now don't want other immigrants to get a taste of success. Because as soon as one immigrant generation finds footing another one comes and the first one feels threatened.
Don't forget the drug war does nothing to help the u.s. or mexico.
People are scared of the cartels and wanna leave the country.
People hate the mining companies that come and rape mexican land for profit and leave the area poisoned. People also hate the corrupt politics in mexico.
Now tell me if your country was so messed up by insiders and outsiders wouldn't you wanna get the hell out??
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mikehart
12:26 PM on 07/18/2011
Big PROBLEM our Sons and daughters of immigrants who came here for a better life, did so legally! maybe you can talk to Calderon to stop this, all the while speaking out against our own laws. Seems you are miss directed!
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clemmers
The rich require an abundant supply of the poor.
12:45 PM on 07/18/2011
Oh really? All immigrants were legal until ... exactly what year? Don't kid yourself. Plenty of Americans, past and present, had parents who immigrated illegally. This happens all over the world. People leave their native land to find better opportunities for work and raising their children.
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AZreb
equal-opportunity Independent heathen
08:28 AM on 07/19/2011
We have always had illegal aliens sneaking into our country - but we have also had a Civil War, the civil rights marches where the people of our own country saw something was wrong and had the guts to fight and march to make it right! Why can't the Mexican people fight for their own freedom from corruption in the government, freedom from the cartels, their human and civil rights? Instead they seem to believe that just because they make it into our country by hook or by crook, they deserve the same "rights" that our ancestors fought for and we, not them, deserve?
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01:07 PM on 07/19/2011
Fear
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Danny Dan
12:32 PM on 07/17/2011
This is sad for sure but lets face it,nothing is free and everyone pays a price.
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sam green 31605
fireobama2012 dotcom
10:40 AM on 07/17/2011
there is a hierarchy when it comes to whom controls the rights to cross into the US. If you are Mexican you go to the top of the heap. If you are from anywhere from south of mexico you are to be victimized. Truly a double standard that the Mexican gov has. They strictly enforce migration laws and I am surprised that the human rights advocates here on HP have said zero on the abuse that the Mexican gov and the smugglers bestow daily on those that aren’t Mexican trying to cross.
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FaceTheTruth00
I'm a girl.
07:17 AM on 07/16/2011
Gee, Mexican drug smugglers and coyotes are subhuman, cruel, violent and not to be trusted? Who knew?
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southingtonian
"I'm a Capricorn and you can't make me do sh*t.."
03:32 AM on 07/16/2011
the immigration laws, from the beginning (Page Act of 1875), were about 'race'.
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TYRANNASAURUS
UGH!....people don't taste good.
05:13 PM on 07/16/2011
These people are not a race....you illiterate.
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southingtonian
"I'm a Capricorn and you can't make me do sh*t.."
09:48 PM on 07/16/2011
you do understand the purpose of the single quotation marks, don't you?
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CenaW
Did you know AOL belongs to A L E C
08:32 PM on 07/16/2011
It is a lottery now.
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southingtonian
"I'm a Capricorn and you can't make me do sh*t.."
09:51 PM on 07/16/2011
worse, it's for sale, if you can write a check big enough, you get to bypass the cachivaches. otherwise, it's a long process and still not cheap, believe me, I know.
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First Blast
won't be fooled again
07:32 PM on 07/15/2011
We need to shut down these smuggling routes.
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CenaW
Did you know AOL belongs to A L E C
08:33 PM on 07/16/2011
Have any of the newly elected Republicans introduced any legislation about the immigration issue?
11:44 AM on 07/18/2011
None I am aware of.
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mikehart
12:29 PM on 07/18/2011
they are to busy working on that Jobs bill.........................
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Dan Crabtree
01:42 PM on 07/15/2011
Mexico on the whole has a serious problem with murder and rape as we all know...several mexican police members gang raped a canadian woman not smart enough to avoid there country a couple months ago. A constant problem so frequent it is very seldom ever investigated.or reported...As there population continues to rise in this nation.. "so does there culture" and america falls without hardly a shot fired. .Way to late to stop without using gestapo tactics..so resign yourself to a new culture..Two major world wars fought to protect this valliant nation..only to hand it to people who simply walk in.
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Barbara DeZan
Knowledge is Power
03:56 PM on 07/16/2011
Nonsense.

The Canadian woman alleged she was raped. No examination, no evidence. Both Mexico and the U/S. are ivestigating.

Meanwhile......in the U.S, an average of 45 people A DAY. are murdered in the U.S. and over 149 rapes everyday.....

When the investigation is finished, if she was raped, then I'll change my mind.

You people just don't like the illegal immigration...nor all those brown people. What a foolish peopleyou are.

I'll remind you that those 2 major wars were fought by Americans and non-Americans by people of all faiths, all races, all religions, all cultures. You "white guys" don't have the market cornered on wars. From the French and Indian Wars, through the Revolutionary War, War of 1812 to the Civil War and up to the current time....ALL have fought..and died..and as we speak, the Deserts of the Middle East are filled with our troops from everywehre..including those "brown people" from Mexico, the West Indies and South America.
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trouble4
Independent because I can think for myself
11:02 PM on 07/19/2011
What we don't like is the fact that we're paying to support them, paying for their medical care whether it be medicaid or ER visits that are unpaid, paying for the additional police to help control the rising violence they bring.

If they want to come here legally, fine, but illegals are costing all of us and this country's piggy bank is broken.
07:29 AM on 07/15/2011
Save the migrants, save the women and children, save the illegal whatever, save us from anymore of these -Liberal- soap opera guilt trips? Seriously, if liberals would let us (United States) use minefields on our border we would solve the immigration problem and the drug problem???
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GraphicMatt
Somebody make me a sandwich!
11:42 AM on 07/15/2011
Sure, because mine fields have always worked out so well wherever they have been used.
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04:08 AM on 07/16/2011
Sure and if we completely close the border, just who will former Governor Arnold of California use (?) as the mother of his children????
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angelavictoria5
Life is short. Do all the good you can!
01:57 AM on 07/15/2011
The El Salvadoran government needs an armistice agreement with the drug cartel. Have they tried to divide territory with the drug cartel so as to PROTECT their citizens?

I was in a restaurant in Italy and a table of hostile young mafiosos were seated in front of me. I asked their permission to look their direction while I ate my meal. No problemas afterward.
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angelavictoria5
Life is short. Do all the good you can!
01:49 AM on 07/15/2011
Why cannot their government seize the drug money and build factories and schools and make a life for their own people?
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GraphicMatt
Somebody make me a sandwich!
11:43 AM on 07/15/2011
Because those in the government would rather be given said drug money to do nothing.
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PuSencer
Where are we going in this handbasket?
09:03 AM on 07/19/2011
they would have to seize all the arms that the cartels have first. that's a bit tricky