By Agence France-Presse
Maria Herrera is scraping at the earth on a hill in the town of Huitzuco, in southern Mexico, looking for the mounds or sunken spots that indicate a decaying corpse.
At 70 years old, Maria Herrera is hoping against all odds to find her four missing sons -- two who disappeared in 2008, and two who vanished in 2010 looking for their brothers. (AFP / MANILA BULLETIN)
At 70 years old, Herrera is hoping against all odds to find her four missing sons -- two who disappeared in 2008, and two who vanished in 2010 looking for their brothers.
"Every time we come to one of these nasty places, we suffer.... Who heard their screams of pain? Who heard their last words?" she said through tears as she dug in the dirt with a group of 100 other activists in the violent state of Guerrero.
The small, gray-haired grandmother is the face of a dirty secret that has haunted Mexico for years: the countryside of Latin America's second-largest economy is littered with bodies.
More than 40,000 people are missing in Mexico, which has been swept by a wave of violence since the government declared war on the country's powerful drug cartels in 2006.
Herrera regularly goes out searching for her sons with other relatives of the "disappeared."
But she is also part of a smaller, even more tragic group: some 20 families who have lost children not once but twice, when the ones who remained went looking for their missing siblings and ended up disappearing too.
At 70 years old, Maria Herrera is hoping against all odds to find her four missing sons -- two who disappeared in 2008, and two who vanished in 2010 looking for their brothers. (AFP / MANILA BULLETIN)
At 70 years old, Herrera is hoping against all odds to find her four missing sons -- two who disappeared in 2008, and two who vanished in 2010 looking for their brothers.
"Every time we come to one of these nasty places, we suffer.... Who heard their screams of pain? Who heard their last words?" she said through tears as she dug in the dirt with a group of 100 other activists in the violent state of Guerrero.
The small, gray-haired grandmother is the face of a dirty secret that has haunted Mexico for years: the countryside of Latin America's second-largest economy is littered with bodies.
More than 40,000 people are missing in Mexico, which has been swept by a wave of violence since the government declared war on the country's powerful drug cartels in 2006.
Herrera regularly goes out searching for her sons with other relatives of the "disappeared."
But she is also part of a smaller, even more tragic group: some 20 families who have lost children not once but twice, when the ones who remained went looking for their missing siblings and ended up disappearing too.