Valeria's death is being investigated as a pesticide – a woman or a girl was killed for sexes – as a community in Zabban, Mexico, mourns her death
A effect on social media was shot during Tiktok Livestream game in what the police treated as a pesticide.
The officers believe that Valeria Marquez, 23, was killed because of her gender but has not yet made any arrests. Mrs. Marquez was shot in his chest and head in a beauty salon in Zaboban, Mexico, on Tuesday and died immediately.
The young woman seemed to be talking to a delivery man outside the camera during the live broadcast when she was injured. Mrs. Marquis, who had nearly 200,000 followers throughout the Instagram and Tiktok, said earlier on the live broadcast that someone came to the salon when there was no “expensive gift” to connect to it. Mrs. Marquis, who seemed worried, said she is not planning to wait until the person returns.
A few hours after she was shot, a former member of Congress was shot with the Mexican Pri Party Luis Armando Cordova Diaz, in a café in the area. It is not clear whether the public prosecutors in Galisco – the wider region – treat her death as a potential, but this type of killing is relatively common throughout Mexico.
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The country is associated with Paraguay, Uruguay and Bolivia as a country with the fourth highest rate of females in Latin America and the Caribbean, according to the latest data. The Gallisco region, part of the central Mexico, is ranked sixth of 32 states in Mexico, including Mexico City, for killings.
The competing cartridge has fought bloody wars for regional control in most Mexico for several years. It has not been emphasized whether Mrs. Marquez had occurred in such a conflict, but since her death, a greeting of women has been pushed on social media. Her Instagram page was immersed by comments that withholds her and express her shock.
TV their anger at the attackers, one of the fans published: “This issue really touched my heart … the evil in the hearts of people, envy, the lack of self -identity among other things, incredible.” Another post: “This is terrible. Its videos on social media were very inspiring.”
Mexico has enacted a number of local and federal laws in recent years to combat sex -based violence against women, but the country still has one of the highest female rates in the world.
Polina Garcia del, Khalil, a co -professor of sociology at the University of Gilf in Canada, said violence is the product of “Machismo” culture, sexual discrimination and inherent institutions that resist recognition of its own responsibility for gender -based violence.
“There is still a sense of entitlement between many men in Mexico-and in other places in Latin America and the world-they feel that they are entitled to obtain the bodies of women. It has been proven that they are very flexible and resistant to change.”