Girl, 6, loses eye after struck by stray bullet while sleeping

In Iztapalapa, Mexico City, not even sleep provides a completely safe haven from the violence that can suddenly break out in the streets of the capital’s most crowded borough.

A stray bullet struck a 6-year old girl while she slept, striking her in the eye.

The bullet pierced the house’s sheetmetal roof and struck the sleeping girl at 2:00am on Saturday in the El Manto neighborhood. Family members rushed the girl to the Iztapalapa Pediatric Hospital but were turned away by hospital staff, who said there were no ophthalmologists on duty.

To draw attention to the girl’s plight, neighbors blocked Ermita Iztapalapa avenue and Javier Rojo Gómez avenue for over an hour. The government intervened, and the girl was transferred first to the Tláhuac General Hospital and finally to the National Pediatric Institute.

Mexico City Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum said the child’s condition was stable after surgery and that two government agencies were engaged in talks with the girl’s family.

On Sunday, Mexico City Attorney General Ernestina Godoy said an investigation into the incident had been opened.

“We are putting together an investigation, and we are looking into what was going on in the area around the El Manto neighborhood at that time. We want to know if there were parties, conflicts or anything like that to pinpoint where [the bullet] came from.”

She added that more measures were needed both at the federal and local level to prevent rampant arms trafficking in the area.

On July 4, 450 elements of the National Guard began operations in the Desarrollo Urbano Quetzalcóatl neighborhood in Iztapalapa, a zone widely considered to be one of Mexico City’s most dangerous.

It was the third incident in two weeks in which children were victims of stray bullets.

Source: El Universal (sp), Animal Político (sp), Excélsior (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
skeleton discovery site

An 11th prehistoric skeleton has been found in a Yucatán Peninsula cenote

1
Previous research suggests the area of the find, between Tulum and Playa del Carmen along the state of Quintana Roo's coastline, functioned as a burial site where ritual practices were performed by the first peoples who inhabited the region.
The firearms are smuggled into Mexico from the U.S., often after they have been purchased by straw buyers.

More than 24,000 illegal firearms seized since Sheinbaum took office

0
The Sheinbaum administration has been seizing guns at a significantly higher rate than the previous government led by Andrés Manuel López Obrador.
collapsed bilding in Mexico City

At least 3 dead in Mexico City building collapse

0
The building had been badly damaged during the 2017 earthquake and was undergoing demolition when three floor slabs gave way prematurely with more than 50 workers inside.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity