Follow posts tagged #juarez in seconds.
Sign up“ we are different and even my parents don't seem to see all those missing women they all look like me but I am told I am different less Mexican less poor American thus worth more different yet all I can see are all the eerie similarities they all worked like I do so many last seen going to or coming from work at US corporate owned maquiladoras but I'm told this isn't an American issue and I'm lucky here on the safe side safe yet not quite out of earshot of distant cries of families searching ditches and roadsides bearing snapshot after snapshot of my brown eyes ”
—Amalia Ortiz, Women of JuárezValentine day in Juarez
Yesterday I smoked
Today I don’t
Yeah, yeah, yeah
Yesterday I swallowed
Today I choke
Yeah, yeah, yeah
Yesterday I dreamed
Today I hope
Yeah, yeah, yeah
Yesterday I sunk
Today I float
Yeah, yeah
Yesterday was a rented room
With a suicide girl and a pull-out view
Charcoal drawings of hearts and sin
Had arrows ripping through his skin
Valentine’s Day in Juárez
Carry roses across the bridge
To gain favor with suicide girls
Valentine’s Day in Juárez
Ramble ‘cross the walking bridge
To get some rice and beans
And suicide throws, yeah
They got the cocaine, oxycontin
Mushrooms, marijuana
Vodka, plastic pop-off
Twist one off
Yesterday I smoked
Today I don’t
Yeah, yeah, yeah
They got the cocaine, oxycontin
Mushrooms, marijuana
Vodka, plastic pop-off
Twist one off
Yesterday I smoked
Today I don’t
Yeah, yeah, yeah
The tales of a broken man
A dangerous thing if you let them in
Where he goes isn’t always clear
Places we both know have been closed for years
Was the tenth day of February when he said
He just met Valentine’s Day in Juárez
Whoa, the walking bridge and those river sounds
He’s a millionaire in that border town
They got the cocaine, oxycontin
Mushrooms, marijuana
Vodka, plastic pop-off
Twist one off
Yesterday I smoked
Today I don’t
Yeah, yeah, yeah
They got the cocaine, oxycontin
Mushrooms, marijuana
Vodka, if you got ‘em
He’s gonna want ‘em
Yesterday I smoked
Today I don’t
Yeah, yeah, yeah
Yesterday I smoked
Today I don’t
Yeah, yeah, yeah
Yesterday I swallowed
Today I choke
Yeah, yeah, yeah
Yesterday I dreamed
Today I hope
Yeah, yeah, yeah
Yesterday I sunk
Today I float
Yeah, yeah, yeah
Yeah, yeah, yeah
Yeah, yeah, yeah
Raise About $ 140,000 To Help Children In Ciudad Juarez ! http://newish.info/201120-raise-about-140-000-to-help-children-in-ciudad-juarez
Juarez killings activist Chavez murdered in Mexico
A Mexican activist who led protests against the unsolved killings of hundreds of women in Ciudad Juarez has herself been murdered.
Susana Chavez was found strangled and with one hand cut off in Ciudad Juarez last week, but has only now been identified.
Ms Chavez tried to draw attention to the killing of mainly poor women in the border town in the 1990s.
Officials say her murder was not related to her activism.
The Chihuahua State Attorney General’s Office said she was killed by three teenagers high on drugs, who cut off her hand to make it look like the murder was connected to organised crime.
Wave of killings
Ms Chavez, 36, coined the slogan “Not One More Death”, which became popular at protests against the Ciudad Juarez killings and the failure of the police to solve them.
More than 300 women were murdered in Ciudad Juarez in a wave of violence which started in 1993 and lasted for a decade.
There is no generally accepted motive for the murders.
They have been variously attributed to serial killers, drug cartels and domestic violence. Some of the killings are believed to have been sexually motivated.
Ms Chavez was active in an organisation called May Our Daughters Return Home, which represents the families and friends of the killed women.
But Attorney General for Chihuahua State Carlos Manuel Salas says her death was the result of an “unfortunate encounter” with the teenagers, who got involved in an argument with Ms Chavez and strangled her.
Human rights group Amnesty International said that although her murder did not seem to be related to her activisim, Ms Chavez’s killing was another sign that violence against women was again on the rise in Ciudad Juarez.
Ciudad Juarez is the most violent city in Mexico, with 3,100 people killed in 2010 out of a population of more than a million.
