Wednesday, December 4, 2024

Man exhumes his mother’s body; he thought she was sleeping

A man from Quintana Roo exhumed his mother’s body and took it through the town on a cargo tricycle on Thursday night.

Wilbert Puch Hau, 47, transported his mother through the Maya community of Noh-Bec, believing that she was still alive, authorities said. Hermelinda Hau Mis had recently died at 70 and was buried in the community cemetery, some 290 kilometers south of Cancún.

The mayor of Noh-Bec, Aurelio Aguilar Hernández, reported at 10:40 p.m. on Thursday that someone had entered the town’s pantheon, desecrated a tomb and taken out a body.

Witnesses said that Puch Hau claimed to have had “a revelation” that his mother was sleeping, which inspired him to extract the recently buried body.

Puch Hau’s father, widower Longimo Puch Chuc, 81, confirmed that his son had had a dream that his mother was still alive. Relatives spoke to Puch Hau to persuade him that he was mistaken, and told him that he couldn’t keep the body.

The body was returned to its coffin and reburied at 1:20 a.m. on Friday. The tomb was closed by relatives.

Longimo did not file any complaint against his son for the theft of the body. However, a public attorney for indigenous issues, Eustaquio Pech Ku, said that the state Attorney General’s Office had received a complaint from police.

The act could be investigated “as a crime against respect for the dead and against the rules of burial covered in the criminal code of the state,” Pech Ku added.

It is unclear if Puch Hau has been arrested.

With reports from El Universal and UNO TV

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
A Mexican man in a green jacket and green baseball cap stands outside the Chamber of Deputies in Mexico City, exhaling a a thick white cloud of smoking after inhaling from a vaping device. He is part of a protest to keep vaping legal.

Mexico’s lower house votes to ban vaping devices and e-cigarettes

0
The bill to make a 2022 presidential ban on the devices part of Mexico's constitution now goes on to debate in the Senate.
Portrait of a Mexican jaguar.

Activists sound alarm over removal of wildlife from around Maya Train

0
The activist group Sélvame del Tren is warning about the practices of a company hired to do species management around the tourist train's tracks.
Fentanyl bust in Sinaloa

Federal authorities intercept more than 20 million fentanyl doses in Sinaloa

1
The Sinaloa security operation, completed in two separate actions, was the largest fentanyl bust in Mexican history.