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381 bodies found stacked inside Ciudad Juarez crematorium in Mexico

Authorities in northern Mexico have uncovered the mummified remains of at least 381 individuals piled inside a private crematorium in Ciudad Juarez — a city long grappling with organised crime and an overburdened forensic system.

The discovery was made during an inspection of the facility, where prosecutors found embalmed corpses “stacked indiscriminately” across several rooms. Officials say the bodies were not cremated, despite being entrusted to the facility by grieving families.

“Preliminarily, we have 381 bodies that were deposited irregularly in the crematorium, which were not cremated,” Eloy Garcia, communications coordinator for the Chihuahua state prosecutor’s office, told AFP.

Garcia described a macabre scene, with bodies left haphazardly on the floor, one atop another, without any proper preservation or identification process. “They were just thrown like that, indiscriminately,” he said.

In some cases, he added, the crematorium provided families with ashes that were not human remains but “other material,” raising serious questions about the facility’s practices.

Authorities suspect that some of the embalmed remains may have been held at the site for up to two years. While the identities of the deceased and the causes of death remain unclear, prosecutors have yet to determine whether any of the corpses are linked to Mexico’s ongoing wave of criminal violence.

Ciudad Juarez, located across the border from El Paso, Texas, has long been a flashpoint in Mexico’s battle against drug cartels and organised crime. The city has witnessed years of bloodshed, disappearances, and an overwhelmed justice system.

One of the crematorium’s administrators has already surrendered to authorities, while investigations are ongoing to determine the full extent of wrongdoing. The prosecutor’s office is also assessing whether any public officials failed in their oversight responsibilities.

Garcia blamed the situation on the “carelessness and irresponsibility” of the crematorium’s operators. “All such businesses know what their daily cremation capacity is,” he said. “You can’t take in more than you can process.”

Mexico’s forensic infrastructure has struggled for years with the volume of unclaimed or unidentified bodies. The country is currently facing a backlog of tens of thousands of missing persons, many of whom are presumed dead. Overwhelmed morgues, underfunded forensic departments, and a shortage of qualified personnel have compounded the crisis.

Human rights groups have long warned of systemic failures in Mexico’s death care system. Forensic experts have repeatedly sounded the alarm over improperly handled remains, mass graves, and delays in identification — issues that continue to leave families in anguish and justice out of reach.

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