Netflix | Deadly Web, the series that denounces the sexual exploitation of migrants in Mexico

(Mexico) In front of the camera, Brenda wonders who will be the next victim in a series of murders of migrants recruited by a sexual exploitation network in Mexico.


Her testimony, along with those of other women, is part of a documentary series called Deadly Web: Zona Divas Victims (The Portal) broadcast from this week on the Netlix platform.

An Argentinian national, Brenda is one of hundreds of women, mostly South Americans, who have arrived in Mexico in recent years, attracted by fictitious job offers circulated by a gang.

Once in Mexico, these women were sequestered and reduced to slavery by this mafia which confiscated their passports and sold their escort services on the Zona Divas website, the four-episode docuseries tells us.

The tragedy experienced by these women was exacerbated when four Venezuelans and an Argentinian woman, caught in the trap of the pimping network, were murdered in 2017 and 2018.

“We wanted to go back to the stories of these women, what brought them to this. They all come from very precarious backgrounds […] and emigrated to Mexico in search of a better future,” Laura Woldenberg, executive producer of the series, told AFP.

Mme Woldenberg specifies that Deadly Web: Zona Divas Victims does not seek to point the finger at the guilty parties, but rather to prevent the abuses from being repeated, as well as to make the clients of prostitutes think.

Fleeing violence and poverty, hundreds of thousands of migrants cross Mexico each year to reach the United States. Many remain in Mexico long enough to raise the money needed to finance their dangerous journey – particularly to pay the traffickers, known as “coyotes.”

Doubly vulnerable

Production managers Astrid Rondero and Fernanda Valadez traveled to Argentina, Venezuela and the United States to speak with the women who managed to escape the network, as well as with the families of the young women who were murdered.

“Because they’re a minority, no one cares. We think, ‘Oh, another girl’s dead!'” Brenda laments in the documentary.

“What makes them doubly vulnerable, in addition to being migrants, is sex work. And of course, there is a lack of trust in Mexican authorities,” says M.me Roundabout.

In Mexico, where around ten women are murdered every day, activists deplore almost total impunity for the murderers.

“After much effort, those who escaped managed to regain control of their bodies and their own work,” explains M.me Validate.

According to local media, around 20 people have been investigated or arrested for their links to the Zona Divas website, which was active between 2001 and 2018.

Among them, Ignacio Santoyo Cervantes, nicknamed “El Sony”, was arrested in 2007 for pimping and trafficking in illegal resources. However, he was released due to lack of evidence and is currently in Cuba, according to the local press and NGOs.

According to the same sources, the network is linked to criminal groups that control drug trafficking in Mexico.

Nearly one in 100,000 people worldwide are victims of human trafficking and more than half of those are victims of sexual exploitation, according to a 2023 UN report.

In a case that echoes the series, Interpol said in July that Colombia and Mexico had dismantled a trafficking ring that forced young South American women into prostitution in bars in Mexican tourist cities.


source site-53