Mexico prosecutors accused of covering up woman's murder

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People take part in a protest demanding justice after the death of Ariadna Fernanda Lopez, a 27-year-old woman who was found dead on a highway in Morelos state, in Mexico City, Mexico November 7, 2022.Image source, Reuters

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Women in Mexico City took to the streets in protest after Ariadna López's body was found

By Vanessa Buschschlüter

BBC News

Anti-corruption officials in Mexico are investigating the attorney-general's office in the central state of Morelos after it was accused of covering up the murder of a young woman, Ariadna López.

The body of López, 27, was found by a highway in Morelos last week.

Morelos's attorney-general's office said she had choked while being drunk.

But a second post-mortem done in Mexico City concluded she had died of multiple force trauma.

Mexico City's mayor said the Morelos attorney-general's office "wanted to hide the femicide, presumably because of links with the presumed killer".

The Morelos attorney-general's office has so far not commented.

The disappearance of Ariadna López and the subsequent discovery her body have again shone a spotlight on murders of women in Mexico and their handling by state officials.

Mexico has seen a surge in femicides - murders in which women or girls are killed because of their gender - in recent years. In 2021, a record 1,004 femicides were registered across Mexico.

What happened to Ariadna López?

The 27-year-old, who lived in Mexico City, disappeared on 30 October after meeting friends in the trendy Condesa neighbourhood of the capital.

Cyclists found her body two days later by a highway in neighbouring Morelos state.

The Morelos state attorney's office carried out a post-mortem on her body.

In a news conference, Morelos state attorney Uriel Carmona said that the cause of death was "severe alcohol intoxication" which led to "bronchial aspiration", ie that she choked on her own vomit while severely drunk.

He added that "we didn't find signs of violence; technically and forensically, the post-mortem does not match a femicide".

But a second post-mortem carried out at the request of the woman's family by Mexico City's attorney-general's office contradicts those findings.

The second post-mortem concluded that her body showed signs of blows and that the cause of death had been multiple force trauma.

Mexico City's mayor, Claudia Sheinbaum, presented the new results in a news conference on Monday. She also played CCTV footage of a man in a parking garage carrying a body, which she said was that of Ariadna López.

Ms Sheinbaum added that the man in the footage had handed himself in to police. She also accused the Morelos state attorney-general's office of "covering up a femicide".

Shortly after Ms Sheinbaum's news conference, the office investigating corruption in Morelos state said it had opened an investigation into "possible crimes" committed by employees of the Morelos attorney-general's office.

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