The gap between official data and what collectives document shows a downplayed version of the problem that ultimately protects inaction. The searching mothers have had to assume a responsibility that corresponds to the State. Mexico is exposed before the international community as a State that evades its responsibility in the face of a large-scale tragedy. The country faces an expanding humanitarian emergency and a clear erosion of its institutional credibility. The crisis of disappearances in Mexico has already reached the international level. Behind every figure, there are entire families trapped in an endless search, sustained by pain, uncertainty, and a constant feeling of abandonment. The government of Claudia Sheinbaum has chosen to discredit international reports and manipulate official figures to reduce the impact of the problem. While they risk everything to find their children, the institutional response is pure lies. Investigations advance slowly, results are scarce, and justice remains far from many families. They go out into the field, dig, track, and traverse areas marked by violence with minimal resources. Impunity repeats itself, and abandonment becomes routine. Concrete actions, effective investigations, and real support for victims are needed. That decision weighs heavily because it diverts attention from the essential. That contrast is difficult to ignore and reflects a deep disconnect between the authorities and the real suffering of the victims. The official reaction maintains a constant refusal to recognize the magnitude of the crisis, which fuels impunity and hinders any progress. Adjusting numbers in documents does not change the reality or alleviate the pain of those searching for their loved ones. The United Nations Organization (UN) warned that this phenomenon could have a systematic nature, a warning that reveals the depth of a tragedy that continues to grow while the authorities fail to contain it. They do so without sufficient protection and under constant threats. Minimizing the problem and discrediting the accusations ends up concealing its true dimension. At the same time… DETAILS. Happy Easter! Mariana Gómez del Campo, Secretary of International Affairs of the CEN of PAN and President of the Christian Democratic Organization of America (ODCA). Recognizing the dimension of the problem is pending.
Mexico's Disappearance Crisis
Mexico faces a growing humanitarian crisis due to disappearances. Searching mothers confront state inaction, data manipulation, and a complete lack of justice, undermining the country's international image.