
By: MANUEL RUEDA
Channel: Latin American Affairs
At least 50 indigenous people are said to have committed suicide in the north of Mexico, where freezing temperatures and a long drought, have left hundreds of members of the Raramuri tribe at the brink of starvation.
The claims, which have not been independently confirmed, were made by indigenous activists and a village mayor to Chihuahua’s channel 28 on Saturday, and were quickly spread on the web by twitter users and activists who hastily organized food drives and fundraising efforts in several Mexican cities.
“When they have four or five days, without being able to feed their children, indigenous women get depressed” said Jesus Quiñones, the mayor of the village of Carichi.
“Their sadness was so great that on December 10th, 50 men and women jumped off a cliff, thinking that they had nothing to give to their children,” Quiñones told Chihuahua’s channel 28, in a video that is now going viral on youtube.
The Raramuri, live in the upper reaches of the Sierra Tarahumara, a mountainous and arid region of Chihuahua state, that is also home to the world famous, Copper Canyon.
In the channel 28 video, Quiñones makes a desperate plea for help.
“Government officials don’t realize the miserable spectacle we are seeing in the sierra right now, with women and children so under nourished that you can see their bones” he said. “Since there is no TV or press in the sierra, the señores here (in the state capital) don’t care if the Indians die, since they are Indians it’s not a problem.”
The Chihuahua government denied claims that indigenous people in the state committed mass suicide. In a statement released on Sunday, it said that Quiñones and others in the video, fail to specify the place where the mass suicide allegedly occurred.
“Only those who do not understand the culture of the Tarahumara race could believe in such an assertion” the statement says. “They have grown up in the harsh sierra environment, which makes them men and women who have the character to withstand anything.”
The state government also mentioned it runs several food aid programs for indigenous people.
But despite these assertions, activists began to collect canned goods, flour and money to send to the Raramuri and their supporters, setting up food collection centers in Mexico City, Chihuahua City, Monterrey and Guadalajara on Sunday, and publishing information about bank accounts to which funds can be sent.
The Twitter hashtag, #SierraTarahumura became quickly popular with Mexican tuiteros, who blamed the government for not investing enough in schemes to mitigate droughts in Northern Mexico and elsewhere in the country.
“What’s the use of Mexico having $100 bln in reserves if our people die of hunger” wrote Twitter user @El_mojado. “They should cancel (pope) Benedict XVI’s visit, and invest that money in our indigenous people instead,” tweeted @frankstrada.
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i hate this world
PARA DONAR A CUENTA DE BANCO Fundación...José A. Llaguno ABP | Cta BBVA Bancomer...
it seems unclear whether this...true, but i find it appalling and scary either way. i wish...
“quisa murdiendonos de hambre como siempre…”- Gloria Anzaldua i cannot think about mexico
my deans date papers. To hear this is upsetting.
Does anyone know of organizations helping with hunger in the sierra?