GUADALAJARA - As many as 48 bags containing human remains were discovered and recovered from a clandestine grave near Guadalajara, Mexican authorities said Thursday.
Guadalajara is the capital of Jalisco state, where one of Mexico's most violent and powerful drug cartels operates and where thousands of people have been reported missing.
The bags with the remains were located four weeks ago by a search group on a vacant lot in Zapopan, a vast outlying municipality in the Guadalajara metropolitan area, the state prosecutor's office said.
Officials said they were still trying to pin down an exact number for victims whose remains were found in the bags. They declined to give an estimate, but said they were carrying on with a search to see if more remains were around.
"We need to make progress on the forensic issue so that we can tell you how many victims this number of bags represents," Blanca Trujillo, deputy state prosecutor for missing persons, told a press conference.
In the meantime, the remains in the 48 bags that were recovered would need to be analyzed, officials said.
Since the grisly discovery, authorities have been working to recover the remains with the support of members of the Guerreros Buscadores collective.
In presenting an official report on the search efforts, Trujillo said her office had the support of the National Commission for the Search for Persons. Because of the vastness of the land, the search has required the use of heavy machinery, she said.
The discovery of the grave site adds to dozens of similar cases in Jalisco, the state hardest hit by the crisis of missing persons affecting Mexico, where more than 127,000 victims have vanished nationwide.
The vast majority of disappearances have occurred within the framework of intensified violence that has shaken Mexico since December 2006, when the federal government launched an anti-drug military operation.
Last June, forensic experts located the remains of 34 people buried near a residential area in Zapopan.
According to official data, Jalisco has more than 15,900 cases of missing persons, a toll that experts attribute to the activities of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG).
Last February, the United States designated the CJNG as a "foreign terrorist organization," after identifying it as one of the main organized criminal groups trafficking fentanyl, a synthetic opioid that has caused the deaths of thousands of Americans.