Home Mexico Mexico: Ex-Immigration Chief Apologizes Over 2023 Detention Center Fire That Killed 40

Mexico: Ex-Immigration Chief Apologizes Over 2023 Detention Center Fire That Killed 40

Speaking at the Museum of Mexico City in front of survivors of the fire and relatives of those who died, Francisco Garduno said he offered his "deepest apologies for the suffering and harm caused to you and your families, whose lives have changed forever."
Mexico
Activists place candles on the ground during a protest outside a migration detention center in Ciudad Juarez, on the day Mexico’s former migration agency chief is due to issue a public apology over a 2023 fire at the facility that killed 40 migrants, Mexico, September 26, 2025. REUTERS/Jose Luis Gonzalez

On Friday, Mexico’s former immigration chief issued a public apology for the 2023 fire at a migrant detention facility in Ciudad Juarez that left 40 people dead and 27 injured. The statement was part of a court deal that spared him a prison sentence.

Speaking at the Museum of Mexico City in front of survivors of the fire and relatives of those who died, Francisco Garduno said he offered his “deepest apologies for the suffering and harm caused to you and your families, whose lives have changed forever.”

The rare apology marks part of a contentious resolution to one of the worst migrant tragedies in Mexican history. The fire in March 2023 garnered international headlines and shone a spotlight on longstanding allegations of corruption and inhumane conditions in Mexico’s migrant detention facilities.

The tragedy began after two migrants set a mattress alight to protest conditions at the detention center, Mexican authorities said. A video from a security camera inside the facility shows the guards walking away as smoke fills the center, but they made no effort to release the migrants.

The person with the key to the cell was absent, Mexico’s former President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said.

Prosecutors accused top immigration officials of failing to “watch over, protect and ensure the safety of the people and facilities in their charge.” They said the case showed a “pattern of irresponsibility.”

Charges Dismissed

In January, a judge in Ciudad Juarez dismissed charges against Garduno – the highest-ranking official to be charged – in exchange for him complying with several conditions, including taking courses in human rights and issuing a public apology to survivors and relatives. Immigrant-rights groups that represented the victims opposed the judge’s decision.

In a statement on Friday, four human rights groups said Garduno’s apology was a “symbolic first step” in providing reparation to the victims and their families.

“The public apology should not be interpreted as an absolution of responsibility or an act of repentance,” the groups said. “It does not resolve the demands for justice or guarantee that similar events will not be repeated.”

The Mexican government has paid roughly 3.5 million pesos ($190,000) to family members of each of the 40 people who died in the fire as well as those who were injured.

Prosecutors are still pursuing charges against two Venezuelan migrants accused of starting the fire as well as 10 former migration officials and private security guards.

Estefan Aragon, a Venezuelan migrant who survived the fire, said to this day he suffers serious pulmonary and breathing problems. “A public apology won’t restore my health,” he said. “We need help.”

(With inputs from Reuters)

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