There have been six major financial settlements in wake of police killings of Black people since 2015.
A video showed Victoria Salazar Arriaza pinned to the ground by police, reminiscent of the death of George Floyd.
Mexican prosecutors have announced that they have opened a homicide investigation into the death of a Salvadoran woman who was shown on video being pinned to the ground by a female police officer, drawing similarities with the death of George Floyd last year.
Victoria Salazar Arriaza, 36, died on Saturday in the Caribbean beach resort of Tulum. A video published by news site Noticaribe showed her writhing and crying out as she lay face down on a road with a policewoman kneeling on her back while male officers stood by.
VIDEO | MATAN POLICÍAS DE TULUM A UNA MUJER: Escándalo por un claro caso de brutalidad policiaca de agentes municipales https://t.co/b6owWNuuhm pic.twitter.com/tbIvwbF6c4
— Noticaribe (@Noticaribe) March 28, 2021
The video then cut to show Arriaza’s prone, handcuffed body lying on the road. Officers are later seen moving her limp, shoeless body into the back of a police truck.
Local media reported that Arriaza, who had been in Mexico for about three years, has two teenage daughters who live in Mexico with her.
In a statement, the attorney general’s office of the state of Quintana Roo said police were probably involved in the woman’s death, which had damaged “institutions and society”.
Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele urged Mexico to apply the “full force of the law” on those responsible for her death.
“All we ask for is justice,” he said on Twitter.
Bukele promised to take care of Arriaza’s daughters, their education, and ensure they had “everything they need”.
Nosotros nos encargaremos de la manutención y estudios de las dos hijas de Victoria y de todo lo que necesiten.
Solo pedimos justicia. Que a los que hicieron esto les caiga todo el peso de la ley. https://t.co/m7vVh48Neg
— Nayib Bukele 🇸🇻 (@nayibbukele) March 29, 2021
Translation: We will take charge of the care and studies of Victoria’s two daughters and everything they need. We only ask for justice. Let the full weight of the law fall on those who did this.
Rene Olivares Arriaza, a half-brother of Salazar Arriaza, told Reuters news agency that he had seen the video and that his family had been informed of her death by mutual acquaintances.
Describing the family’s keen sense of loss and his “powerlessness” at seeing the video, Olivares said he could not understand how she had died, and also called for justice.
A spokeswoman for the attorney general’s office said it was unclear why the woman had been detained and that the cause of her death was still under investigation. Three male officers and one female officer had so far been questioned, the office said.
El Salvador’s President Nayib Bukele, in a statement, promised to take care of Salazar Arriaza’s daughters, their education, and ensure they had ‘everything they need’ [File: Jose Cabezas/Reuters]
Alejandro Encinas, Mexico’s deputy interior minister responsible for human rights, called the incident an act of “police abuse”.
The incident bore similarity to the case of George Floyd, a Black man whose death in May after a Minneapolis police officer knelt on his neck sparked racial justice protests in the United States and around the world.
Floyd’s death was captured on widely seen bystander video and sparked sometimes violent protests in Minneapolis and beyond, leading to a nationwide reckoning on race.
Opening arguments in the murder trial of former Minneapolis policeman Derek Chauvin – the white police officer who put his knee to Floyd’s neck for nearly nine minutes – began on Monday.