Toronto Star Referrer

Mexico investigates deadly fire

FABIOLA SÁNCHEZ AND MORGAN LEE

CIUDAD JUAREZ, MEXICO Mexican authorities said Wednesday that eight employees or officials are being investigated for possible misconduct at a migrant detention centre where a fire killed 39 detained men.

Anger and frustration in the northern border city of Ciudad Juárez boiled over as hundreds of migrants walked to a U.S. border gate hoping to make a mass crossing.

Mexican officials appeared to place blame for the deaths in the fire late Monday largely on private, subcontracted security guards at the detention centre in Ciudad Juárez. Video showed guards hurrying away from the smoky fire apparently without trying to free detainees.

No charges were announced, but authorities said they would seek at least four arrest warrants later in the day, including one for a migrant who was part of what they described as a small group that started the fire. Five of those under investigation for possible misconduct are private security guards, two are federal immigration agents and one is a Chihuahua state officer, federal Public Safety Secretary Rosa Icela Rodríguez. said

The investigation has centred on the fact that guards appeared to make no effort to release the men before smoke filled the room in a matter of seconds.

The deaths caused frustration, and may have played a role in a mass march late Wednesday afternoon by hundreds of migrants, who began walking toward a U.S. border crossing in the belief that American authorities would let them through.

WORLD | NEWS

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2023-03-30T07:00:00.0000000Z

2023-03-30T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://thestarepaper.pressreader.com/article/281749863614793

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