Wednesday, February 11, 2026

56 children among those rescued from human traffickers

A raid in the Oaxaca municipality of Santa María Atzompa rescued 61 people on the weekend — including 56 youngsters — from forced labor and abuse.

Earlier complaints were dispelled when the captors claimed they all belonged to the same family, but the state Attorney General’s office continued to investigate.

Saturday’s raid found that rather than being one happy family there were 61 people being held as forced laborers: seven women, 27 girls and 29 boys, along with six babies younger than two years.

Originally from the Chiapas town of San Miguel Miotiqui, the victims were found living in crowded conditions in a space that also served as a warehouse. The captives’ only bed was made of pieces of cardboard; there was no bathroom on the property.

The youngsters were transported to busy intersections in nearby Oaxaca city where they sought money from motorists by juggling, selling various products or begging for 12 hours or more per day.

The investigation found that the adult women were sexually assaulted by their captors and forced to give birth in the building where they were kept.

Police arrested the presumed leader of the gang of human traffickers and 10 others.

Their captives were placed in the care of the DIF family services agency.

Source: Milenio (sp), El Financiero (sp), NVI Noticias (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
dam level measurers

Cutzamala, the Mexico City area’s main water supply system, is getting its first upgrade in 4 decades

0
The system, which carries water from three México state dams to 5 million users in the Valley of Mexico and its surroundings, uses some of the largest pumping equipment in the world.
stacks of peso bills signaling corruption

Mexico ranks last among OECD countries on 2025 Corruption Perceptions Index

2
According to a global ranking of how transparent a country’s public sector is perceived to be by experts and business executives, Mexico scored 24/100 in 2025, down from its highest score of 35 in 2014.
EL PASO OCTOBER 24. FedEx departs the El Paso International Airport on the way to Memphis on October 24, 2014 at El Paso, Texas.

Did a Mexican cartel just try to attack El Paso?

2
The FAA lifted the temporary closure of airspace over El Paso just hours after it said in a Notice to Airmen that aircraft could not fly above El Paso until Feb. 21 for "Special Security Reasons."
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity