It is now more than four years since the prominent poet and women’s rights advocate Susana Chávez Castillo was found murdered in the border town of Ciudad Juárez on 6 January 2011. She had been strangled and had had one of her hands cut off; her body was only identified five days later. Chávez had been highly vocal in calling for justice for the hundreds of women killed in the Juárez area since the early 1990s, both as an activist and through her writings; she took part in numerous poetry readings which she dedicated to the murdered women. Her poem ‘Sangre Nuestra’ (Our Blood) was written from the perspective of a victim.
Sangre Nuestra – by Susana Chávez Castillo
Sangre mía,
de alba,
de luna partida,
del silencio.
de roca muerta,
de mujer en cama,
saltando al vacío,
Abierta a la locura.
Sangre clara y definida,
fértil y semilla,
Sangre incomprensible gira,
Sangre liberación de sí misma,
Sangre río de mis cantos,
Mar de mis abismos.
Sangre instante donde nazco adolorida,
Nutrida de mi √∫ltima presencia.
 
Our Blood (translation)
Blood of my own,
blood of sunrise,
blood of a broken moon,
blood of silence,
of dead rock,
of a woman in bed
jumping into nothingness,
Open to the madness.
Blood clear and definite,
fertile seed,
Blood the unbelievable journey,
Blood as its own liberation,
Blood, river of my songs,
Sea of my abyss.
Blood, painful moment of my birth,
Nourished by my last appearance.
Throughout the course of their investigation, the authorities denied that Chávez’ murder was related in any way to her activism and poetry, or to organised crime, despite the recent murder and harassment of numerous other local rights defenders. The Chihuahua state attorney general’s office alleged that she was killed by three teenage boys she had met while out drinking, and on 3 April 2013, a court in Ciudad Juárez sentenced three juveniles to 15 years in prison for her murder. According to reports, one of her alleged killers was released on 22 July 2013 after a court found that there was insufficient evidence to support the claim that he was directly involved in Chávez’ murder.
Despite a conviction for Chávez’ killing, in the vast majority of murders of writers and journalists, impunity reigns. Mexico remains one of the most dangerous countries in the world in which to exercise one’s right to freedom of expression. At least 67 print and internet journalists, bloggers and writers have been murdered in the country since 2004. Very few – if any – of these murders have been satisfactorily resolved. At least 10 other print journalists have disappeared since in Mexico in the last decade; their fate remains unknown Few if any of these crimes have been solved.
In March 2013, PEN International and Guadalajara PEN submitted a shadow report on violence and impunity in Mexico to the Office of the High Commissioner on Human Rights as part of the United Nations’ Universal Periodic Review of Mexico’s human rights record. In its report, PEN called for full and transparent federal-level investigations into the murder and disappearance of journalists and writers as well as investigations into all allegations of attacks carried out by government entities.
In 2012, PEN International published the anthology Write Against Impunity, a literary protest highlighting the escalating violence against journalists, writers and bloggers in Latin America – in particular Mexico, Honduras and Brazil – and the impunity enjoyed by those who commit these crimes. A number of contributors to the anthology dedicated poems to Chávez’ memory, including the poem ‘Tongue’, by Carmen Boullosa,  who will be appearing at the English PEN Literary Salon on Thursday 16 April, and Claribel Alegría’s poem ‘Impunity’.
As part of our ongoing 2015 Mexico focus and to mark this year’s World Poetry Day we are joining with PEN International and PEN centres all over the world in calling for justice for Susana. Please join us.
Take Action
- Share details of Susana’s case on Twitter (with the hashtags #MXUK2015 and our handle @englishpen if possible);
- Write to the Mexican authorities calling for justice for Susana and the many other writers murdered in Mexico.
Please send appeals calling on the Mexican authorities to:
- Carry out prompt and rigorous investigations into all killings of journalists and writers and bring those responsible for these crimes to justice;
- Involve the Special Prosecutor for Crimes against Freedom of Expression (Fiscal Especial para la Atenci√≥n a Delitos cometidos contra la Libertad de Expresi√≥n – FEADLE) in all investigations;
- Ensure that all investigations are provided with enough resources to guarantee that there is a meaningful likelihood of ensuring justice.
President of Mexico
Enrique Peña Nieto
Residencia Oficial de los Pinos
Col. Chapultepec, Mexico D.F., C.P. 11850, Mexico
Fax: +52 55 5093 4901
Email via website: http://en.presidencia.gob.mx/contacto/
Twitter: @EPN
Federal Attorney General
Jes√∫s Murillo Karam
Procuraduría General de la República
Reforma 211-213, Col. Cuauhtémoc, C.P. 06500, Mexico City, Mexico
Fax: +52 55 5346 0908
Email: [email protected] or click here.
Twitter: @PGR_mx
Special Prosecutor FEADLE (Fiscal Especial para la Atención de Delitos cometidos contra la Libertad de Expresión)
Laura Angelina Borbolla Moreno
[email protected]
Please also send copies of your appeals to the Mexican Embassy:
Mr Diego Gomez-Pickering
Embassy of Mexico
16 St George Street
London
W1S 1FD
Fax: +4420 7495 4035