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(单词翻译:双击或拖选)
Mexico's official list of missing people passes 100,000, with few cases ever solved
MEXICO CITY — Mexico marked a grim milestone2 this week: The number of people officially listed as disappeared passed 100,000.
A national database for the missing began in the 1960s, but the numbers really shot up after 2006, when Mexico's government launched a U.S.-backed war against drug cartels.
Relatives of the disappeared and human rights advocates say Mexican authorities must do more to bring about truth and justice for the victims.
"The scourge3 of disappearances4 is a human tragedy of enormous proportions," said Michelle Bachelet, the United Nations high commissioner5 for human rights.
Virginia Garay says her then 19-year-old son Bryan left the house in February 2018, and never came back. He left for work, selling hot dogs, just three blocks from their home in the Pacific Coast state of Nayarit.
He never made it to work. And she has never stopped looking for him.
Garay is part of a growing number of mothers and relatives digging around Mexico, underneath6 clandestine7 graves. The authorities do little to solve missing person cases, she says.
"Literally8 we dig in the dirt looking for the disappeared," Garay tells NPR.
Virginia Garay is part of a national search brigade in Mexico, digging in hidden graves and elsewhere for her missing son, who is pictured on her hat. Her son, Bryan, went disappeared when he was 19 years old in February 2018.
Jesus Alvarado/picture alliance via Getty Image
According to investigative journalist Marcela Turati, with the group Quinto Elemento Lab, most of the disappeared are young men, most likely caught up in drug trafficking. But there are many others who are not involved in the trade.
"It can be journalists, human rights defenders9, Indigenous10 people. Everybody can be disappeared because the impunity11 allows it," Turati says.
Very few crimes in Mexico are ever solved and fewer lead to a conviction. Disappearances have spiked12 in the last two years, despite promises by President Andrés Manuel López Obrador.
Months after taking office in 2019, he said his government would do everything humanly possible to stop them. Critics say that promise wasn't realized. But López Obrador says his strategy against violence will take time.
Garay, whose son has never been found, says relatives are inconsolable, devastated13 and exhausted14. "I can rattle15 off many more adjectives," she says. "But none are enough to relay the desperation of not knowing where your loved one is."
1 transcript | |
n.抄本,誊本,副本,肄业证书 | |
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2 milestone | |
n.里程碑;划时代的事件 | |
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3 scourge | |
n.灾难,祸害;v.蹂躏 | |
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4 disappearances | |
n.消失( disappearance的名词复数 );丢失;失踪;失踪案 | |
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5 commissioner | |
n.(政府厅、局、处等部门)专员,长官,委员 | |
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6 underneath | |
adj.在...下面,在...底下;adv.在下面 | |
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7 clandestine | |
adj.秘密的,暗中从事的 | |
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8 literally | |
adv.照字面意义,逐字地;确实 | |
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9 defenders | |
n.防御者( defender的名词复数 );守卫者;保护者;辩护者 | |
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10 indigenous | |
adj.土产的,土生土长的,本地的 | |
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11 impunity | |
n.(惩罚、损失、伤害等的)免除 | |
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12 spiked | |
adj.有穗的;成锥形的;有尖顶的 | |
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13 devastated | |
v.彻底破坏( devastate的过去式和过去分词);摧毁;毁灭;在感情上(精神上、财务上等)压垮adj.毁坏的;极为震惊的 | |
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14 exhausted | |
adj.极其疲惫的,精疲力尽的 | |
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15 rattle | |
v.飞奔,碰响;激怒;n.碰撞声;拨浪鼓 | |
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