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Raymundo Ruiz/AP/Press Association Images

Twenty-year-old Mexican police chief fired after going on the run

Student and single mother Marisol Valles Garcia made international headlines when she took on the job no-one else wanted. Now she’s apparently fleeing for her life.

A YOUNG WOMAN who made international headlines when she accepted the job as police chief in a violent Mexican border town was fired yesterday for apparently abandoning her post after receiving death threats.

Marisol Valles Garcia was granted a leave of absence from 2-7 March to travel to the United States for personal matters but failed to return to Praxedis G. Guerrero as agreed, and was subsequently fired.

City officials said in a statement:

In the absence of (Valles Garcia’s) presence on the agreed-upon day, and since there was no notification of a need to extend the period of her absence, the mayor has decided to remove her from office.

A local official accompanied Valles Garcia last week to the international bridge connecting El Porvenir to Fort Hancock, Texas, said Human Rights Commission official Gustavo de la Rosa Hickerson.

Local news media have since reported that she was seeking asylum in the United States, but there has been no confirmation of that and her precise whereabouts were not clear.

Over the weekend, as speculation increased that she was seeking refuge, officials tried to contact Valles Garcia by cell phone but were unable to reach her.

De la Rosa Hickerson said on Monday that he still had not been able to reach her and did not know where she was. He added that he would ask officials to retract their dismissal of the young chief.

I have the impression that this position by the mayor is a bit hasty. Because right now Marisol needs support, and one way to be supportive is to leave her in office.

De la Rosa Hickerson said residents of Praxedis told him Valles Garcia had received threats against her life, and there may even have been an attempt to kidnap her.

“To fire her is to leave her completely alone,” he said.

Valles Garcia was just 20 when she was named police chief of Praxedis G. Guerrero in October. The town had been without a police chief since her predecessor was shot to death in July 2009.

Drug violence has transformed the township of about 8,500 people from a string of quiet farming communities into a lawless no man’s land.

- AP

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Jennifer O'Connell
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