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[MEXICO CITY, 30 November 2010] – It has been found that children and adults with disabilities are disappeared, trafficked and abused within psychiatric institutions and orphanages in Mexico. Following a year-long investigation, Disability Rights International (DRI) and the Comisión Méxicana de Defensa y Promoción de los Derechos Humanos (CMDPDH) released findings today in a joint report detailing the human rights abuses perpetrated against children and adults with disabilities in Mexico. Abandoned & Disappeared: Mexico’s Segregation and Abuse of Children and Adults with Disabilities, describes the disappearances of children from Mexican orphanages and institutions and the discovery by investigators of people in institutions held without any record of their names, ages or location of placement. There is no way for anyone, including parents, to find them among the thousands of abandonados who are relegated to a life-time in these institutions. Within institutions, investigators identify a broad range of atrocious conditions and life-threatening forms of mistreatment. Investigators found: people with disabilities left permanently in restraints, some of whom were tied into beds and wheelchairs; the use of lobotomies (psychosurgery) without consent; people detained for a lifetime in locked facilities simply because they have a disability; and filthy and inhumane living conditions. The report finds that detaining children or adults with disabilities in restraints for years at a time may constitute nothing less than torture under article 1 of the UN Convention Against Torture. "These are Mexico's most vulnerable citizens - abandoned children disappearing into a world of exploitation and abuse and people with disabilities forced to endure a lifetime of egregious human rights abuses in institutions. We found egregious violations of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) - a Convention the Mexican government championed and helped draft. The government of Mexico has promised to uphold these rights," said attorney Eric Rosenthal, Executive Director of DRI and primary author of the report. "The human rights violations being perpetrated against children with disabilities in Mexico are every bit as serious as any this organization has documented over the last twenty years," said Juan Carlos Gutiérrez, the Executive Director of the CMDPDH. "We call on the government of Mexico to stop these abuses immediately and protect the human rights of all people with disabilities." "When you are diagnosed with a mental illness in Mexico you can be locked up and have all your rights taken away. We are treated like sub-humans," says José Ángel Valencia Orozco, a mental health system user who was formerly detained in an institution. "The new Disability Rights Convention promises that we can be part of society like other people, and that is all we are asking for." DRI is an international human rights and advocacy organization dedicated to the human rights protection and full participation in society of people with disabilities worldwide. See www.disabilityrightsintl.org. CMDPDH is a human rights organization based in Mexico City with extensive experience documenting human rights abuses in Mexico and litigating cases in Mexican courts and working through the inter-American system of human rights. See www.cmdpdh.org. For more information on DRI's campaign to end the institutionalisation of children, click here.