Mexico trailer storing corpses angers residents

Meatpie

OWNER/ADMIN
Staff member
Administrator
Joined
Oct 7, 2008
Messages
61,460
Location
Bulgaria
3DNZDUy.jpg


A refrigerated trailer containing at least 100 corpses in Mexico's western state of Jalisco has angered residents who have complained about the smell.

Authorities said on Monday they were trying to relocate the container, which was rented after mortuaries in the city of Guadalajara became full.

"We have a lot of children in this neighbourhood... it could make us all sick," resident José Luis Tovar said.
Laws in Mexico prevent the cremation of bodies linked to violent crime.
Local authorities said they were looking for a longer-term solution to store the bodies following a recent wave of violence.

"We ran out of cemetery plots where we could bury them," the head of the Jalisco forensic investigators unit, Luis Octavio Cotero, said.

He added that a site was being established that was expected to facilitate some 800 corpses, AFP news agency reports.

The refrigerated trailer had previously been parked at a warehouse in the neighbourhood of Duraznera, on the outskirts of Guadalajara, but after two weeks the residents began to complain of a foul stench and said the container was attracting flies.

It was then moved to an empty lot in the suburb of Tlajomulco de Zúñiga, but residents there began to protest at the weekend.

"We don't want it here. They need to put it somewhere else, it stinks," Mr Tovar said.
Mexico has suffered a wave of violent killings in recent years.

x7kK8ba.jpg


More than 200,000 people have been killed or have disappeared since December 2006, when Mexico's government declared war on organised crime.

Mexico experienced its most violent year in 2017 with more than 25,000 murders, official figures suggest. It is the highest annual tally since modern records began. Organised crime accounted for nearly three-quarters of those murders.
 
The smell.....
 
Why don't they just park the trailer out in the middle of nowhere. Mexico is big enough that it shouldn't be necessary to store decomposing corpses in residential neighborhoods.
 
Back
Top