Inside Mexico’s house of horrors:
Harrowing images emerge of foster children behind bars as officials say victims
slept on rat-infested floors and were fed rotten food
·
Relatives say workers demanded ransoms to
free children kept there
·
Prosecutors say residents told them they were
beaten, raped and starved
·
Nine suspects have been detained by police,
including the owner
Youths freed from a refuse-strewn
boarding house by Mexican federal police were sexually abused and held to
ransom by staff, say relatives and officials.
Parents
said they tried to remove their children from the Casa de la Gran Familia in
Zamora, Michoacan, western Mexico, but were met with demands for thousands of
dollars for their release.
And
authorities said residents, including children, told them they were forced into
having sex with workers at the home, beaten, starved and locked in a small cell
as punishment for rule breaking.
Ten of the
residents were so malnourished police couldn't even determine their age.
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down for video
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Children rest in one of the rooms
of the La Gran Familia in Zamora, Michoacan State, Mexico, after the federal
police raid which rescued 607 adults and children who prosecutors said were
kept in deplorable conditions
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A view of the interior yard of La
Gran Familia, piled up with filthy mattresses. Officials said the residents
suffered beatings and sexual abuse, and were forced to sleep on the floor among
rats, ticks and fleas
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What appear to be donated shoes
are lined up in one of the rooms of La Gran Familia, which had been a
well-respected care institution part-funded by the government and visited by
politicians and dignitaries
Mainly
poor parents and other relatives gathered outside the home last night as a
truck hauled away about 20 tons of rubbish from what authorities said was an
insect-infested shelter that had housed 607 adults and children.
Maria
Valdivia Vasquez, 65, waited to be allowed to see her 17-year-old grandson,
Jose Antonio Martinez. She told the Associated Press his mother sent him to The
Great Family group home a decade ago because of his bad behaviour.
Relatives
were allowed to visit him only twice a year, and shelter employees had recently
been sitting in on the visits, apparently to monitor residents' comments, she
told the news agency.
Mrs
Valdivia Vasquez said that when she decided to ask that the boy be released to
her, shelter founder Rosa del Carmen Verduzco, known as 'Mama Rosa', demanded
70,000 pesos ($5,400; £3,200) for his release.
She said
Jose Antonio often barely spoke in front of the shelter employees, but once
told her 'he wanted his mother to suffer the same thing he was suffering
there.'
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Reproduction of an image of
squalid conditions at La Gran Familia shown in a press conference in Mexico
City
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Makeshift beds where residents of
the home slept, reproduced from a picture shown at the press conference
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Bundles of cardboard and other
refuse are hauled out to a rubbish truck outside Gran Familia
Mexican
federal police swooped on La Casa de la Gran Familia on Tuesday, after parents
filed complaints with authorities because they were being stopped form seeing
their children.
One was a
woman who had two babies at the home. But after she was allowed to leave, the
owner allegedly kept the youngsters, which were registered under the owner's
name.
The police
raid freed six babies under three, 154 girls, 278 boys, 50 women and 109 men
who officials said were kept in deplorable conditions, fed rotten food and
forced to sleep on the floor among rats, ticks and fleas.
Nine
employees of the shelter, which acted as a foster home of sorts, have been
detained and are being questioned.
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A girl standing amongst relatives
waiting to be reunited with their children, stands just inside a police cordon
around La Gran Familia. Relatives said staff demanded ransoms in exchange for
releasing residents
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A woman sobs as she waits to be
allowed to visit her child. Despite the horrors Mexican authorities were
keeping residents at the home while they worked out where they can be
transferred to
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Maria Isabel Blancas Gonzalez
holds her 16-year-old daughter's teddy bear, as she waits to be reunited with
her
Raquel
Briones Gallegos, a 44-year-old housewife, said she tried to get her
20-year-old son, Luis Oropeza Briones, out of the shelter in April.
'They ran
me out of the house and said insulting things,' she told the Associated Press.
He would call her on the phone in recent months saying that 'he wanted to
leave, to please get him out of there,' she said.
Residents
were still being kept at the home while officials look for places to transfer
them. Federal authorities said they were ensuring that the residents were being
fed properly, and were giving medical help.
Police and
soldiers standing guard outside let small groups of relatives in for brief
visits. For some families, it was their first time inside in months.
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Police stand guard around the
home as onlookers and relatives wait for a chance to visit their loved ones
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Relatives wait to be reunited
with their children. Nine employees of the shelter are being questioned
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Mexican federal police swooped on
La Casa de la Gran Familia on Tuesday, after parents filed complaints with
authorities because they were being stopped from seeing their children. Now
they are waiting to be let in
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A woman talks to a heavily armed
federal policeman outside Gran Familia yesterday afternoon
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An official tries to decide which
relatives to take into Gran Familia next to see their children
Prosecutors
said early statements given by residents described sexual abuse, beatings,
hunger and filth in a once well-regarded group home.
Some were
forced into sex by shelter employees and others told of being locked in a tiny
punishment room without food or water, officials said.
'Victim
No. 4 said she had been held in the group home against her will since she was
18,' said Tomas Zeron, federal chief of criminal investigations.
'She was
sexually abused by one of the administrators, and got pregnant as a result of
the abuse. The same person beat her to cause an abortion, beating her in the
stomach on several occasions.'
Two boys
told investigators a male staff member had forced them to engage in oral sex
and warned one of the boys that 'he would kill him and sell his organs if he
refused,' said Mr Zeron.
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A police officer walks inside the
entrance to Gran Familia, where investigators taking initial statements say
residents have complained of beatings, rapes, sexual assaults and starvation at
the hands of staff
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Relatives were waiting into the
night to get a chance to see their children, who are being treated by doctors
and interviewed by investigators trying to piece together a picture of what was
going on inside Gran Familia
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For some families, it was their
first time inside in months
Attorney
General Jesus Murillo Karam said some other employees apparently tried to
protect the children.
'There are
statements that truly hurt, that make you angry,' he said. 'But there are
others that save your faith in humanity, about those who truly converted
themselves into protectors of the children.'
Authorities
have said the shelter had been highly regarded and the government sometimes
gave money or even entrusted children to the shelter.
It was
often visited by politicians, and local media published photographs of the
owner with former President Vicente Fox, former Michoacan Governor Leonel Godoy
and other officials.
Mr Murillo
Karam said the home was subject to government oversight, but the 'institution's
prestige may have made the inspections less intense.'
3 comments:
The photos don't necessarily match the story. They could be depicting any number of situations. Some are even from stock image web sites.
Disgusting to look at, everyone involved need to be prosecuted to the fullest. This, should not be happening in America, now this makes me think, kids are being kidnapped and taken over the borders to United Sates, unwillingly. This has to stop. with God, watching over these kids, it will stop. God, thanks for saving some of these kids. Also, I thank all authorities that got involved,and stop this terrible abuse of kids. thank you authorities very much.
Mexicans just shouldn't breed like rats, they should be responsible for producing a living, breathing human being and be prepared ahead of time to take care of the needs of this person. Don't just put children in dumps like these! Until something changes in the mind and hearts of these people who theirselves are responsible for creating this mess, it will continue. These people sure the hell don't need to be allowed to come to the United States of America. Let the Mexican government care for their own people. Keep you mentally messed up people there in your own country. When experiments have been done where they just allowed overpopulations of rats to be kept in a cage together, they started attacking each other and killing each other. The "Rand Corporation" knew way back in the 1970's that these Latin American countries were overpopulating way back then. This has got to stop!
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