- Massacres in Colombia increased by 40 percent in 2010, says a report by the United Nations (UN) presented Thursday. The rising violence is to increased activity by the drug-trafficking gangs descended from the right-wing paramilitaries, labeled "criminal bands" (bandas criminales - BACRIMS) by the government. According to Colombia's UN High Comissioner for Human Rights, Christian Salazar, these groups are now the "principal threat to the state and to human rights in Colombia," reports El Colombiano. According to the UN office, at least 179 people were massacred in 38 different incidents in 2010, compared with 139 people killed in 27 massacres in 2009.
Friday, 25 February 2011 13:28
Juarez Activists Killed; 450 Arrested in US Drug Sweep
Written by Elyssa Pachico- In Juarez, police found the bodies of three family members related to human rights activist Josefina Reyes, killed by unidentified gunmen in January 2010. Cronica reports that Reyes' brother, sister and sister's were found southeast of the city. They had been reported missing since the beginning of February. Reyes was a vocal protestor against military torture and abuse in Juarez. Another member of the Reyes family has asked the government to solve the deaths as quickly as the government responded to the death of U.S. agent Jaime Zapata, according to El Universal.
Tagged under
Latest from Elyssa Pachico
- How Venezuela's Prison Economies Drive Inmate Violence
- 'Illegal Mining Bigger than Drug Trade in Peru': Analyst
- Venezuela Border Clash Points to Colombia Spillover Violence
- Perez Uses Fuzzy Math to Highlight Guatemala's Dropping Homicides
- Poll Suggests Calderon's Drug War Hurt by Lack of Coherent Strategy





