Overview
- Three members of the Memoria, Verdad y Justicia collective entered near the close of the Acapulco civic‑military parade, chanting for their missing children under the lead of Socorro Gil Guzmán.
- The women carried banners with dozens of faces, including Gil Guzmán’s son, Jonathan Guadalupe Romero Gil, who was detained and disappeared by municipal police in 2018 according to the group.
- They passed before the presiding stand and positioned by the flagpole where Mayor Abelina López Rodríguez and military and naval commanders were seated.
- López Rodríguez expressed solidarity with the mothers and said she would meet with them, adding that her administration has provided support without specifying details.
- The parade began at 8:00 a.m. from the Asta Bandera at Playa Papagayo to the Glorieta de La Diana, lasted about an hour, featured reported counts of 950 Armed Forces and National Guard personnel, 191 municipal police, 85 Protección Civil and Bomberos, and 23 schools, and drew comments about a reduced visible military presence.