A defender of Mexican jaguars who survived an assassination attempt in March was described on Thursday as a 'living miracle' during the presentation of a report that documented the killing of 10 activists in the country in 2025.The drug war violence convulsing Mexico also takes a toll on environmental activists, many from indigenous communities. The country is considered "megadiverse" for its variety of species and ecosystems.
Speaking at the press conference for the Mexican Center for Environmental Law (CEMDA) where the report was released, the activist and journalist Erik Saracho recounted the armed attack he survived last March 11 at his home in the western Mexican state of Nayarit.
"I told the hitman 'good morning,'" he recalled, "and at that moment he opened fire with a pistol."
The director of the Jaguar Alliance, a civil organization dedicated to protecting the endangered feline, said he then pressed the panic button the federal government gave him due to previous threats.
Over 25 minutes passed before he received the medical help that saved his life.
Beyond 10 killings, Cemda recorded 135 "aggressions," ranging from cases of "stigmatization" and "defamation" to "robbery" and "surveillance."
Gustavo Alanis, executive director of Cemda, said that the Mexican state is "the primary perpetrator of aggressions" against environmental activists.
According to the report, an array of federal, state, and municipal authorities participated in the 76 cases of aggression - 56.2 percent of the documented threats.
Nonetheless, the organization clarified in the report that state agents weren't documented participating in any of the ten registered homicides.
According to Cemda, over the past decade 199 environmentalists have been murdered in Mexico in relation for their defense of natural resources and ecosystems.