Zürcher Nachrichten - Daughter of missing Mexico environment defender pleads for global help

EUR -
AED 4.320028
AFN 77.928084
ALL 96.687666
AMD 448.756226
ANG 2.106084
AOA 1078.684404
ARS 1707.727186
AUD 1.767836
AWG 2.120313
AZN 1.99668
BAM 1.960338
BBD 2.368683
BDT 143.712693
BGN 1.955745
BHD 0.443478
BIF 3474.521948
BMD 1.176318
BND 1.517468
BOB 8.143333
BRL 6.513252
BSD 1.176022
BTN 105.434944
BWP 15.510919
BYN 3.420517
BYR 23055.835989
BZD 2.365205
CAD 1.61652
CDF 3009.613322
CHF 0.932109
CLF 0.027265
CLP 1069.520366
CNY 8.282397
CNH 8.271776
COP 4495.288096
CRC 586.239695
CUC 1.176318
CUP 31.172431
CVE 110.520854
CZK 24.31926
DJF 209.418571
DKK 7.468215
DOP 73.600384
DZD 152.590849
EGP 55.835473
ERN 17.644772
ETB 182.262816
FJD 2.690651
FKP 0.882373
GBP 0.874175
GEL 3.158405
GGP 0.882373
GHS 13.436706
GIP 0.882373
GMD 85.871073
GNF 10280.799931
GTQ 9.011325
GYD 246.042264
HKD 9.150655
HNL 30.999764
HRK 7.535512
HTG 153.981885
HUF 388.511425
IDR 19729.090593
ILS 3.770894
IMP 0.882373
INR 105.344055
IQD 1540.666625
IRR 49522.99459
ISK 147.604497
JEP 0.882373
JMD 187.714557
JOD 0.834032
JPY 184.697835
KES 151.652879
KGS 102.868451
KHR 4717.620449
KMF 494.054045
KPW 1058.68631
KRW 1740.721521
KWD 0.361595
KYD 0.98004
KZT 606.425825
LAK 25473.21226
LBP 105310.57833
LKR 364.102059
LRD 208.14859
LSL 19.643775
LTL 3.473362
LVL 0.711543
LYD 6.381556
MAD 10.766123
MDL 19.9105
MGA 5298.107417
MKD 61.620122
MMK 2470.635456
MNT 4177.368481
MOP 9.424136
MRU 46.877521
MUR 54.310303
MVR 18.173692
MWK 2039.190687
MXN 21.141202
MYR 4.79701
MZN 75.173363
NAD 19.643775
NGN 1716.247918
NIO 43.277981
NOK 11.887854
NPR 168.689759
NZD 2.028261
OMR 0.4523
PAB 1.176048
PEN 3.960468
PGK 5.003583
PHP 69.092249
PKR 329.437542
PLN 4.21803
PYG 7946.395813
QAR 4.298752
RON 5.088394
RSD 117.390647
RUB 92.537782
RWF 1712.739289
SAR 4.411456
SBD 9.583169
SCR 16.378651
SDG 707.55429
SEK 10.847665
SGD 1.515809
SHP 0.882543
SLE 28.29024
SLL 24666.808023
SOS 670.910374
SRD 45.178263
STD 24347.410991
STN 24.556849
SVC 10.290823
SYP 13008.17495
SZL 19.637877
THB 36.629991
TJS 10.819525
TMT 4.117114
TND 3.440064
TOP 2.832292
TRY 50.367873
TTD 7.995271
TWD 37.047549
TZS 2924.304577
UAH 49.502598
UGX 4237.810481
USD 1.176318
UYU 46.096713
UZS 14108.661385
VES 331.909521
VND 30984.220406
VUV 141.867944
WST 3.279358
XAF 657.459449
XAG 0.017116
XAU 0.000266
XCD 3.179059
XCG 2.119544
XDR 0.818516
XOF 657.479056
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.434128
ZAR 19.632756
ZMK 10588.278855
ZMW 26.577833
ZWL 378.773968
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    0.0300

    23.2

    +0.13%

  • BCC

    -0.0900

    74.68

    -0.12%

  • NGG

    0.1200

    76.23

    +0.16%

  • CMSD

    0.0650

    23.315

    +0.28%

  • BCE

    -0.1750

    22.665

    -0.77%

  • GSK

    0.0000

    48.61

    0%

  • RIO

    1.8500

    80.17

    +2.31%

  • JRI

    -0.0700

    13.31

    -0.53%

  • AZN

    0.3610

    91.721

    +0.39%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1100

    15.5

    -0.71%

  • BTI

    0.3800

    56.83

    +0.67%

  • RBGPF

    0.7800

    81

    +0.96%

  • VOD

    0.0400

    12.88

    +0.31%

  • RELX

    0.2750

    41.005

    +0.67%

  • BP

    0.4750

    34.415

    +1.38%

Daughter of missing Mexico environment defender pleads for global help
Daughter of missing Mexico environment defender pleads for global help / Photo: Richard PIERRIN - AFP/File

Daughter of missing Mexico environment defender pleads for global help

Brenda Diaz Valencia's life was upended nearly two years ago when the bullet-riddled truck driven by her father, Mexican environmental defender Antonio Diaz Valencia, and lawyer Ricardo Lagunes was found abandoned.

Text size:

Both men had spent years denouncing what they saw as the catastrophic environmental impacts and inadequate community benefits of a giant open-pit iron mine in San Miguel de Aquila, in Mexico's central Michoacan state.

Now, the 39-year-old Diaz Valencia said she is determined to rally the international community to action.

"I'm here to ask for help, to find the truth, and for them to be returned," she told AFP in Washington, where she was accompanied by Alejandra Gonza, an international human rights lawyer.

"I know that the United States can do a lot and put pressure on the Mexican government to do the impossible to bring them back," she said.

Her father and Lagunes had been fierce critics of the mine's operator, Luxembourg-incorporated steel giant Ternium, which posted global sales of $17.6 billion in 2023 and operates in a region rife with powerful gangs.

The two men were declared missing on January 15, 2023 after attending an anti-mining community meeting, becoming the latest victims in a grim trend of violence targeting environmental and human rights defenders -- and critics of Ternium.

In a statement to AFP, Ternium said it "maintains its deep concern over the disappearance" of the pair, adding that it takes the situation with the "utmost seriousness."

"Ternium rejects any attempt to contextualize violence in Mexico or the regions where it operates to associate our company or its officials directly or indirectly with violent cases such as the above mentioned or the disappearance of any people."

- Protecting forests and people -

Diaz Valencia, a teacher, recalls her father's lifelong commitment to safeguarding the rivers, forests and Indigenous Nahua traditions of San Miguel de Aquila.

Over time, she witnessed the Aquila River, once the lifeblood of the community, run dry as its waters were redirected for iron ore mining, which also led to deforestation for exclusive roads.

"The presence of this mine also fractured the social fabric," she said, describing a profound consequence of the mine's operations.

While Ternium paid royalties to the community, publicizing the recipients sparked extortion by organized crime.

In 2019, as Ternium expanded and increased payments, her father accused a small group, allegedly backed by the company, of claiming leadership roles to misappropriate funds.

He and Lagunes were working to elect new officials, renegotiate royalties and address environmental impacts.

But their activism came at a price: they were shadowed by armed men and repeatedly threatened.

At one community assembly, held in the presence of company representatives, they were warned that if they continued to oppose Ternium, they would be forcibly disappeared.

In a letter to then-president Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador in December 2022, Diaz Valencia accused Ternium of colluding with armed groups to suppress the Aquila community.

A month later, he and Lagunes were gone.

- Critics go missing -

The men's disappearance isn't an isolated case.

A decade ago, three Aquila community representatives who challenged Ternium on financial promises vanished and were later found dead.

Between 2006 and 2023, at least 93 land and environmental defenders went missing across Mexico, with 40 percent still unaccounted for.

In April 2023, the Mexican attorney general's office announced two arrests tied to the activists' disappearance, citing internal Nahua disputes.

A year later, media reports linked the case to the Jalisco New Generation cartel, one of Mexico's most feared criminal organizations.

Gonza, president of Global Rights Advocacy, argues that it is too convenient for the government to blame the disappearances solely on organized crime rather than investigating systemic issues.

"You have to open up at least all lines of investigation," she said, noting organized crime's domination in the area and extremely powerful corporate interests.

She and co-counsel Thomas Antkowiak from Seattle University have filed complaints with the United Nations and the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.

"It's not only Mexico's responsibility to bring them back," Gonza argued, but of the many wealthy countries connected to Ternium, which can pressure the company to review its Mexican operations.

Brenda Diaz Valencia said her relentless advocacy is driven by the hope that the disappeared are not forgotten — and that one day, she will see her father again.

"I will keep that hope," she said.

M.J.Baumann--NZN