The heartbreaking disappearance of Perla Alison, a young girl from the Santa Martha Acatitla neighborhood in Mexico City, has come to a devastating end. Perla was last seen after leaving her home with permission to buy candy at a nearby store. When she failed to return, her family immediately raised alarm, prompting a nationwide Amber Alert and an extensive search effort by both authorities and community groups.
Days later, her body was discovered in an abandoned building near the Constitución de 1917 metro station after a neighbor reported a foul smell coming from the area. Officers from the Secretariat of Citizen Security (SSC) secured the scene, and the Mexico City Attorney General’s Office later confirmed the discovery. According to officials, signs of violence were present, and while an autopsy is pending, early findings suggest Perla may have suffered abuse before her death.
The incident has deeply shaken the nation, igniting public outrage, particularly across social media, where users had been actively sharing Perla’s photo and updates in hopes of finding her alive. Now, calls for justice and accountability are growing louder. Feminist and civil rights organizations have condemned the crime and demanded that those responsible face the harshest possible punishment under the law.
Perla’s case has become a painful symbol of the ongoing femicide crisis in Mexico, where women and girls continue to face extreme violence. Advocates argue that the system repeatedly fails to protect the most vulnerable and are calling for stronger preventive measures, faster response times, and deeper legal reforms to address gender-based violence.
As the femicide investigation unfolds, the community continues to mourn the loss of a child who simply went out to buy candy and never came home. The demand is clear: justice for Perla Alison and for all the other girls whose stories never should have ended this way.