World
Politics
Mexicans protest against drug war
Updated: 2011-06-11 15:09
(Agencies)
Relatives of missing women hold flyers with information about their loved ones after a rally led by Mexican poet Javier Sicilia to support victims of feminicide in Ciudad Juarez June 10, 2011. Hundreds of Mexicans began a week-long procession through Mexico on Saturday to protest the country's bloody drug war, led by Sicilia, a crusading poet whose son was murdered by suspected cartel hitmen. Human rights activists and families of victims of violence formed a peace caravan and piled into 13 buses and more than two dozen cars to set out on a 12-state tour that will end in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico's most violent drug war city on the US border. The sign reads "In Juarez, justice first". [Photo/Agencies]
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A woman prays next to pink crosses erected in memory of some of the women murdered since 1993, before a rally led by Mexican poet Javier Sicilia in Ciudad Juarez June 10, 2011. Hundreds of Mexicans arrived to this border city after a week-long procession through Mexico to protest the country's bloody drug war, led by Sicilia, a crusading poet whose son was murdered by suspected cartel hitmen. Human rights activists and families of victims of violence formed a peace caravan and piled into 13 buses and more than two dozen cars to set out on a 12-state tour that ended in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico's most violent drug war city on the US border. The crosses had been placed by relatives at the location of the first shallow graves attributed to the serial murders, where eight women's bodies were found eighteen years ago. [Photo/Agencies]
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