A 23-year-old influencer was shot and killed on Tuesday at a magnificence salon in Jalisco, Mexico, whereas she was livestreaming on TikTok, based on the state prosecutor’s workplace.
The influencer, Valeria Márquez, was working on the salon in Zapopan, a part of the metropolitan space of Guadalajara, and streaming to a few of her 113,000 followers on TikTok, when two males pulled up exterior on a bike, Denis Rodríguez, a spokesman for the Jalisco State Prosecutor’s Workplace, stated. One of many males entered the salon sporting a masks, in search of Ms. Márquez.
“He requested her straight: ‘Are you Valeria?’” Mr. Rodríguez stated. She responded, “Sure.”
The person then pulled out a gun and shot her earlier than hopping on the motorcycle and fleeing.
Ms. Márquez’s TikTok account appeared to have been taken down on Wednesday, however a video of the killing circulating on-line, which was confirmed by the prosecutor’s workplace, confirmed her sitting in a chair on the salon, holding a pink stuffed pig in her lap, earlier than trying away from the digicam. A second later she clutches at her chest and abdomen earlier than slumping over in her chair. One other girl’s face is then seen earlier than the video cuts out.
When investigators arrived later, “she was nonetheless sitting within the chair, the place she was stunned, with that doll, the little pig, proper there in her arms,” Mr. Rodríguez stated.
The prosecutor’s workplace stated it didn’t have any suspects, nevertheless it was reviewing surveillance footage and brushing by means of her social media for clues as to whom the attackers is likely to be. The lads, who visited the store earlier within the day saying they have been attempting to ship a present for Ms. Márquez, most definitely didn’t personally know her, as they needed to ask for her by identify, Mr. Rodríguez stated.
“They didn’t have a private relationship,” he stated. “He was merely her executioner.”
The prosecutor’s workplace stated that it was investigating the crime as a doable “femicide,” a sort of gender-based violence in opposition to ladies. Such assaults are sometimes unpunished in Mexico.
Ms. Márquez’s loss of life was the newest reminder of the rise in violence in opposition to ladies within the nation.
The killing occurred days after Yesenia Lara Gutiérrez, a mayoral candidate within the state of Veracruz, was gunned down together with three others throughout a marketing campaign march on Sunday — an assault that was also captured on a livestream.
A recording of that stream, which was posted on Ms. Gutiérrez’s Fb web page and was nonetheless on-line as of Wednesday night, exhibits her shaking the palms of residents and marching along with her supporters by means of the streets, earlier than a sequence of gunshots ring out. Moments later, a few of her supporters could be heard screaming whereas others run from the scene, earlier than the digicam goes darkish.
Mexico has enacted a lot of native and federal legal guidelines lately to fight gender-based violence in opposition to ladies, however the nation nonetheless has one of many highest charges of femicide on this planet.
The violence is the product of a “machismo” tradition, ingrained sexism and establishments that resist acknowledging their very own accountability for gender-based violence, stated Paulina García-Del Ethical, an affiliate professor of sociology on the College of Guelph.
“There’s nonetheless a way of entitlement amongst lots of males in Mexico — and elsewhere in Latin America and the world — they really feel entitled to ladies’s our bodies,” Dr. García-Del Ethical stated. “It’s confirmed to be very resilient and resistant to vary.”
A study in 2023 from a gaggle of teachers in Mexico discovered that femicide has been rising within the nation for almost a decade, outpacing different violent crimes, with round 10 or 11 ladies murdered each day.
In response to the United Nations, greater than 50,000 women have been murdered from 2001 to 2024, with lower than 5 % of the instances leading to convictions.
State actors typically fail to research, or once they do, they downplay the violence by specializing in gendered stereotypes, like what a feminine sufferer was sporting or the alternatives she could have made that led to her loss of life, Ms. García-Del Ethical stated. “Just about victim-blaming,” she added.
After Ms. Márquez was shot, customers flooded her TikTok account with messages expressing shock and condolences. Some questioned whether or not the footage was actual. TikTok didn’t instantly reply to a request for remark.
It’s unclear whether or not the one that attacked Ms. Márquez knew that she was broadcasting stay, however, Ms. García-Del Ethical stated, “Any form of public feminicide desires to ship a press release, whether or not it’s transmitted stay or not: That males can kill ladies with impunity.”
“Feminicidal violence in Mexico is so deep, and so broad, you aren’t essentially protected by advantage of being of wealthier socioeconomic standing, or being a politician or being even stay,” she added. “It doesn’t matter.”
McKinnon de Kuyper contributed reporting.