To Join the Vitural Sit-In. The Sit-in will END on August 15th, 2002 at 8am (EST) 
Ajúntense a la manifestación virtual aqui.
   Return to this Page on August 14, 2002 8am (EST)
    
Augusto 14, 2002 asta Augusto 15, 2002.
     
Please sign this petition.
http://www.PetitionOnline.com/JUAREZ/petition.html
On Wednesday, August 14, 2002, there 
    will be a performance and procession
    organized by The Women in Black Art Project and artist 
    Coco Fusco to raise
    awareness about the now nearly 800 women who have been murdered 
    or
    "disappeared" in and around Ciudad Juarez, State 
    of Chihuahua, Mexico over
    the past decade.
The event will begin in front of the main Organization 
    of American States
    building at 17th and Constitution in Washington, DC, starting at noon.
    The organizers hope to attract 300 participants who will join the costumed
    Women in Black figures in a solemn procession to the offices 
    of the OAS´
    Commission on Human Rights several blocks away. Participants will wear
     costumes that evoke the uniforms worn by female maquiladora 
    workers, and
    black garb similar to that worn by the mothers of the disappeared and
    murdered young women in demonstrations conducted frequently in Ciudad
    Juarez and other cities in Mexico. Each participant will carry a
    photograph of a murdered or missing woman.
Upon arriving at the Commission on Human Rights office building, 
    a letter
    to the Commission Chairperson will be hand-delivered. The 
    letter will urge
    the speedy action by the Commission on a request addressed to it several
    months ago by an organization of the families of the murdered and missing
    women. The request, sent to the Commission, and to the appropriate
    officials of the Government of Mexico in early 2002, demands that the
    Commission declare the murders and abductions in Chihuahua a crime against
    humanity. The hope is that such a declaration will encourage 
    action
    by the governments of both Mexico and the US, which, to date, have not
    seriously addressed what constitutes a war against young women in Northern
    Mexico.
To learn more about activities in support of the families 
    of the murdered
    and missing women, log on to
http://www.geocities.com/pornuestrashijas.
The Women in Black Art Project, which 
    is part of the international
    feminist peace movement active in 30 countries, has been conducting vigils
    to raise awareness of the worldwide pandemic of violence against women,
    and the exacerbating effect on this pandemic of wars and other conflicts.
The performances in support of the families of 
    the Ciudad Juarez murdered
    and missing women will involve choreographed movements of women wearing
    three sculptural costumes, the heart of the Women in Black Art Project
    (see www.artwomen.org/current.htm 
    for photos of the costumes in vigil on
    International Women´s Day, 2002).
In addition to the street action there will be a 
    virtual sit-in by the Electornic Disturbance Theater against
    the OAS and the government of Chihuahua on the same day, 
    and artist Adriene
    Jenik will accompany the Women in Black digitally by inserting W-I-B 
    figures
    into various chat rooms.
For further information, and to join the Action, please contact Mary Jo Aagerstoun at
mjaag@wam.umd.edu.
    ACCION, 14 de agosto, 2002, para las mujeres asesinadas 
    en Ciudad Juarez
El miercoles, 14 de agosto, 2002, se presentará un 
    performance y unaprocesión
    organizados por Las Mujeres en Negro Proyecto-Arte 
    y la artista
    Coco Fusco para tomar consciencia los casi 800 casos 
    de mujeres que han
    sido matadas o desaparecidas durante los últimos diez años en 
    Ciudad Juarez
    y sus alrededores, Estado de Chihuahua.
El evento va a comenzar delante del edificio principal 
    de la Organización
    de Estados Americanos en la esquina de la calle 16th y la avenida Consitution
    en Washington DC, a las 12 del dia. Las organizadoras 
    quieren atraer unos
    300 participantes quienes se reuniran con las figuras de las Mujeres en
Negro en una procesión solemne hacia las oficinas de 
    la Comisión de Derechos Humanos
    de la OEA, que estan ubicadas a unas cuadras del edificio principal. Los
participantes se vestirán como las trabajadoras de 
    maquiladoras en la frontera
    mexico-americana, o como las madres de las desaparecidas en Ciudad Juarez
    y otras ciudades de México. Cada participante cargará la foto 
    de una mujer
    asesinada o desparecida.
Al llegar al edificio de la Comisíon de 
    Derechos Humanos, una carta dirigida
    al director de la Comisión será entregada a mano. Esta carta 
    pedirá la
    atención inmediata de la Comisión a una solicitud que fué 
    enviada hace
    varios meses por una organización de las familias de las mujeres asesinadas
y desaparecidas. Esta solicitud, que fué enviada a 
    la Comisión, y a los oficiales del gobiero
    de México a principios del 2002, pide que la Comisión proponga 
    que las
    matanzas y los secuestros en Chihuahua sean declaradas crimenes contra
    la humanidad. Esperamos que esta declaración promoverá acción 
    por parte
    de los gobiernos de México y de los Estados Unidos, que hasta ahora, 
    no
    han prestado seria atención a lo que constituye una guera contra las 
    mujeres
    jovenes del Norte de México.
    Para saber más acerca de las actividades que apoyan a las familias 
    de las
    mujeres matadas y desparecidas, pueden ver la página web:
http://www.geocities.com/pornuestrashijas.
Las Mujeres en Negro, un movimiento internacional feminista 
    a favor de
    la paz activo en 30 paises, ha llevado a cabo sus vigilias en todos estos
    paises para concientizar sobre la epidemia mundial de violencia contra
    lasmujeres, y el impacto exacerbante DE esta epidemia sobre las guerras
    y otros conflictos sociales. 
Este performance de apoyo a las familias de las mujeres matadas 
    y 
    desparecidas de Ciudad Juarez va a incorporar movimientos coreograficos 
    de mujeres que llevarán las tres vestimentas esculturales, que forman 
    
    el corazón del 
    proyecto de las Mujeres en Negro, (vean www.artwomen.org/current.htm
    para tener acceso a las fotos de estos vestuarios que fueron usados para el
    Dia internacional de la Mujer, 2002).
Además del performance callejero, se montará 
    una manifestación virtual
    contra la OES y el gobierno de Chihuahua el mismo día, y la artista 
    Adriene
    Jenik nos acompañará virtualmente como Mujer en Negro digital 
    dentro de varios
    espacios "chats" en el internet.
Para más información y para unirse a la acción por favor comuniquese conMaryJo Aagerstoun en
mjaag@wam.umd.edu.
Please sign this petition.
http://www.PetitionOnline.com/JUAREZ/petition.html
An Open Letter to the Interamerican Commission 
    on Human Rights and Our
    Supporters Worldwide:
Between 1993 and May of this year (2002), in the city of 
    Juarez, more than
    450 women have disappeared and 284 women have been found murdered. Our
    city is a zone of transit between the Mexican interior and the United
    States, and hosts a large settlement of migrants who originally came here
    thinking that they were going to cross the border into the US.
The murdered and missing women were, for the most part, 
    migrants, but they
    also had other characteristics that made them especially vulnerable. They
    were also poor women who lived in high-risk areas with little or no access
    to basic services such as running water, plumbing, streetlights and very
    little police protection.
The majority of these homicides began with kidnappings 
    that were not 
    investigated when reported. Later the missing women were found dead in
    vacant lots throughout the city. It is worth noting that, in addition
    to the characteristics we have already noted that made them vulnerable,
    the victims all have the same physical appearance in that they are thin,
    dark-skinned and have long, dark hair.
At present there are several men detained by the police 
    who are accused
    of being the killers and masterminds of these crimes. In 1995, Omar Lattif,
    and the gang called The Rebels were arrested. In 1999, the gang called
    the Toltec and the Chauffeurs were apprehended. In 2001, Victor Garcia
    Urbe and Gustavo Gonzalez Meza were arrested. With the exception of Omar
    Sharif Lattif who was sentenced to 30 years in prison, none of the other
    men has been formally sentenced to a prison term. This notwithstanding,
    it is now known that the body of the young woman who Omar Sharif was jailed
    for killing is not that of the woman he actually killed.
Neither of the two governmental administrations has responded 
    to the demands
    for justice from the families of these murdered and missing young women,
    which have been made over what is now almost 10 years.
In 1998, the National Commission on Human Rights in our 
    country issued
    a recommendation (44/98) to the government of the state of Chihuahua,
    which, among other things, called for enforcing the laws applying to bureaucrat
    s who do not carry out their duties with regard to these complaints in
    a timely manner. Nonetheless, the recommendation has not, as of this date,
    been addressed.
Some family members of the victims have confronted this 
    situation by taking
    action, which has enabled us to avoid feeling impotent. We have denounced
    the crimes, and have made demands and pressured the authorities. We have
    also organized to help each other, and to give each other support, and
    to look for possible solutions to this situation. We have disseminated
    information to the media about what is happening to us. Our organization
    is called MAY OUR DAUGHTERS COME HOME. Our objectives also restore our
    sense of ourselves as members of our communities and as families. As human
    beings, we are capable of surviving tragedies such as these, but we needthem 
    to be recognized. 
    Currently, we are working on several petitions to bring cases before the
    Interamerican Commission on Human Rights. Special Envoy Martha Altolaguirre
    took five of these petitions away with her when she visited Juarez in
    March of this year (2002). We firmly believe that seeking access to judicial
    bodies is the last resort in our quest for justice, and in our demand
    for redress for the arbitrariness and denigrating dismissiveness of our
    elected officials toward our murdered and missing daughters. We are also
    painfully aware that while no amount of money will compensate for the
    loss of any of the dead and missing women, we do hope that by seeking
    and receiving reparations we will set an important precedent so that,
    in the future, no other state or federal government will fail to protect
    the human rights of its inhabitants, 
    especially its women.
In light of the above, we ask that:
-The Interamerican Commission on Human Rights include in 
    its next report,
    the information which Martha Altolaguirre will deliver to the chairperson,
    and will reiterate the necessity to address womenâ€s human 
    rights.
-That the Mexican government be urged to request special 
    assistance to
    end governmental incompetence and inattention to the proper gathering
    of evidence in the cases of the murders and disappearances of our daughters.
-That protective mechanisms be created to defend human 
    rights and protect
    the families of the victims.
-That the Mexican National Commission on Human Rights be 
    directed to make
    public the steps it has taken to follow up on the implementation of 
    recommendation 44/98.
-That the municipal, state and federal authorities be directed 
    to take
    joint responsibility for the investigation of the murders and disappearances
    of women, and to deal with the prevention of violence against women.
-That there be a swift and efficient investigation and 
    punishment for all
    those in authority who were responsible for the violations of human rights
    that have been committed since 1993.
Sincerely
NUESTRAS HIJAS DE REGRESO A CASA, A. C. MAY OUR DAUGHTERS RETURN HOME
LETTER IN SUPPORT OF MAY OUR DAUGHTERS RETURN HOME
We, the undersigned, join the members of the Mexican organization, 
    MAY
    OUR DAUGHTERS RETURN HOME, to call on the Inter-American Commission on
    Human Rights, the Mexican government, and human rights activists worldwide
    to use all measures possible to bring an end to the violence in Juarez,
    Mexico, that has resulted in nearly 300 deaths and 500 disappearances
    of young women since 1993. 
    We also take note that the murdered and disappeared young women of Juarez
    are also victims of the negligence of their local, state and federal government
    , in that to this day, no adequate response to this tragic violence has
    been made by Mexican politicians or law enforcement. We also note that
    law enforcement in Juarez has actually attempted to repress the efforts
    of those in Juarez who are organizing protests in solidarity with MAY
    OUR DAUGHTERS RETURN HOME.
    Finally, we also want to make known that the murdered and disappeared young
    women of Juarez lived and worked in highly unsafe conditions without proper
    public services. Many of them worked in maquiladoras, or assembly plants,
    owned by multinational corporations that pay no taxes to the Mexican 
    government. The maquila industry currently is being used by 70% of the
    labor intensive Fortune 500 companies expanding between 10% and 20% per
    year and currently accounts for over 3,107 businesses employing over 1,056,284
    persons with an annual business volume in excess of $37 billion of inputs
    and supplies of which 98% is of U.S. origin. About 90% of the maquilas
    are located along the US- Mexico border with over one third concentrated
    in Juarez. 
    There are currently 340 maquiladoras in Juarez that employ over 220,000
    people. Among them are many American companies such as Ford, Alcoa, General
    Motors, DuPont, and Contico. These corporations do not provide any protection
    to their largely female workforce when employees are travelling to and
    from work, very often in the middle of the night. We request that these
multinational entities that are reaping millions of dollars 
    in the state
    of Chihuahua to provide financial assistance for the insurance of public
    safety. We call these companies to assist the Mexican government and human
    rights organizations and to stop the killings of these innocent women
    once and for all.
     
COMISIÓN ESPECIAL PARA CONOCER Y DAR SEGUIMIENTO A LOS HOMICIDIOS DE MUJERES EN CIUDAD JUÁREZ, CHIHUAHUA.
Conmutador General de Cámara: (55) 5628-1300 No. gratuito desde el interior de la República: 01 (800) 718-4291 DIPUTAD@ CARGO PARTIDO UBICACIÓN EXTS.
Dip. Hortencia Enríquez Ortega henriquez@diputados-pri.org.mx Presidenta anterior PRI-Chih B - 2º. 3347/3348
Dip. David Rodríguez Torres drodriguezt@diputados.pan.org.mx Presidente Recien nombrado PAN- H - 4º. 7531/7527
Dip. Hortensia Aragón Castillo haragonc@prdleg.diputados.gob.mx Secretaria PRD-Chih B - 3º. 1797
Dip. María Teresa Campoy Ruy S. terecampoy@yahoo.com.mx Secretaria PVEM- H - 3º. 7403/1456
Dip. Rosa Delia Cota Montaño rosadelia_cota@hotmail.com Secretaria PT-B.C.S. B - 1º. 3212/1422
Dip. Hilda Anderson Nevárez hjanderson@diputados-pri.org.mx Integrante PRI- B - 1º. 3203/3259
Dip. Francisco Cárdenas Elizondo fcardenas@diputados-pri.org.mx Integrante PRI- B - 1º. 3226/3213
Dip. José Jesús Reyna García jjreyna@diputados-pri.org.mx Integrante PRI-Mich C - PP 4616
Dip. María Eugenia Galván Antillón mgalvana@diputados.pan.org.mx Integrante PAN-Chih F - 2o. Com. Salud 1746/7505
Dip. Manuel Arturo Narváez Narváez mnarvaen@diputados.pan.org.mx Integrante PAN-Chih H - 3º. 7581/7585
Dip. José Tomás Lozano Pardinas jlozanop@diputados.pan.org.mx Integrante PAN- H - 4º. 7517/7553
Dip. Manuel Duarte Ramírez mduarter@prdleg.diputados.gob.mx Integrante PRD-Mich B - 3º. 3464