Monday, February 3, 2020

At famed Mexican butterfly reserve, second worker found dead




The worthless people killing these innocent activists are environmental terrorists. They need to be exterminated just like Saddam Hussein was. So sad. People trying to protect this earth and the animals and they are killed for their compassion. - Ted

A second activist campaigning for the conservation of monarch butterflies and the woods in which they hibernate has been found dead in Mexico.
Raúl Hernández worked as a tour guide at a butterfly sanctuary in Michoacán state.
His body, which bore signs of beatings and a head injury, was found two days after the funeral of Homero Gómez.
Mr Gómez managed a monarch butterfly sanctuary in the same state and had received threats, his family said.

What happened?

Raúl Hernández, 44, disappeared on Monday 27 January. He had left work as usual and was last seen at midday in a village called El Oyamel.
His body was found six days later at the top of a hill in the El Campanario monarch butterfly sanctuary. Forensic experts said his body was covered in bruises and he had a deep wound to his head. An investigation into his death is under way.
Conservationists fear his death may be linked to that of Homero Gómez, who disappeared in the same area on 13 January.
Mr Gómez's body was found in a well on 29 January. His family said that prior to his disappearance, the activist had received threats warning him to stop his campaign against illegal logging.
People carry the coffin with the remains of Mexican environmentalist Homero Gomez, during his funeral procession in El Rosario village, Ocampo municipality, Michoacan State, Mexico, on January 30, 2020.Image copyrightAFP
Image captionFriends and relatives carried Homero Gómez's coffin from the butterfly sanctuary to the cemetery
He was a tireless campaigner for the conservation of the monarch butterfly and the pine and fir forests where it hibernates. The sanctuary he managed opened in November as part of a strategy to stop illegal logging in the area, which is a key habitat for the species.
Officials initially said his body showed no signs of violence, but a post mortem examination revealed he had suffered a blow to the head before drowning in the well.
Mexico's murder rate has risen in recent years and official figures suggest 2019 had the highest rate ever recorded, with 34,582 recorded killings.
Many are believed to be carried out by criminal gangs who kill anyone who could interfere with their illegal activities, which range from drug and human trafficking to extortion, logging and mining.

What's special about the monarch butterfly?

Scientists have been fascinated by the orange and black butterflies because of the vast distances they fly each year to hibernate in Mexico - the longest migration of any insect.
Researchers found that the butterflies use a kind of internal solar compass to guide them during their flight from Canada and the US to the same area on the border between Michoacán and Mexico state every year.
Media captionUS scientists say butterflies use the sun to navigate, as Victoria Gill reports
Once they reach the mountain hillsides of the oyamel fir forests in that area, they cluster together to stay warm. Tens of thousands of butterflies can be seen on a single tree, creating a colourful spectacle which has become a draw for tourists.
But environmentalists have warned that illegal logging poses a major risk to these forests and the butterflies which spend the winters here.


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This is the TYRANNY and VIOLENCE immigrants are escaping.
REUTERS.COM
Mexican authorities said on Saturday they are investigating the possible murder ...



URUAPAN, Mexico (Reuters) - Mexican authorities said on Saturday they are investigating the possible murder of a tour guide working at a famous butterfly reserve in the western state of Michoacan, just two days after its former environmental activist was buried.
Raul Hernandez’s body was found in the area in the early hours of Saturday, with different parts beaten, and a head injury possibly caused by a sharp object, the state attorney general said.

Earlier this week, Mexicans in El Rosario mourned the death of activist Homero Gomez, who had fought for a decade to protect the monarch butterflies until his mysterious death. It is unclear whether the two cases are connected.
The sudden disappearance of such a high-profile campaigner had sparked an outcry in Mexico, an increasingly violent country where activists are routinely threatened, harmed or even killed as a result of their work.
Millions of the orange and black insects make a 2,000-mile (3,220-km) journey each year from Canada to winter in central Mexico’s warmer weather. However, they are facing new challenges linked to extreme weather and changing habitat.
Michoacan state is not only home to the country’s largest monarch butterfly reserve, a World Heritage Site, but also rival drug gangs who battle to control smuggling routes through often-arid terrain to the Pacific and the interior of the country.
Reporting by Alan Ortega in Uruapan, Michoacan; Writing and additional reporting by Stefanie Eschenbacher; Editing by Andrea Ricci

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