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    Vizsla mine worker killings in Mexico: security and project risk notes for engineers

    February 9, 2026|

    Reviewed by Tom Sullivan

    Vizsla mine worker killings in Mexico: security and project risk notes for engineers

    First reported on MINING.com

    30 Second Briefing

    Kidnappers who abducted Vizsla Silver workers on 23 January in Sinaloa, Mexico, have killed at least some of the victims, whose bodies were recovered from a clandestine grave near El Verde, about 15 km from the company’s Panuco silver-gold project in Concordia. Vizsla has suspended certain activities at the high‑grade Panuco project, which hosts 12.8 million proven and probable tonnes grading 2.01 g/t gold and 249 g/t silver and is planned to produce 17.4 million silver‑equivalent oz. per year over 9.4 years. The security crisis has driven Vizsla’s Toronto‑listed shares down 42% since 28 January, raising serious questions over project execution and workforce protection in the region.

    Technical Brief

    • Abductions occurred on 23 January while engineers and technical staff travelled ~15 km from Concordia camp to site.
    • Victims were intercepted by an organised criminal group, indicating targeted vulnerability of routine mine commuting routes.
    • Bodies were later recovered from a clandestine grave in mountainous terrain near El Verde, complicating search logistics.
    • Sinaloa’s ongoing armed conflict between rival cartel factions has driven a marked increase in regional homicide rates.
    • Vizsla has temporarily halted unspecified activities at and near Panuco, effectively imposing a partial operational shutdown.
    • Company is awaiting formal confirmation from Mexican authorities before disclosing victim numbers or revising operating protocols.
    • For comparable remote mining projects, structured journey management, armed escorts and camp–portal “safe corridors” become critical design considerations.

    Our Take

    With Panuco’s projected all-in sustaining cost of US$10.61/oz silver-equivalent and a planned start in the second half of 2027, prolonged security instability in Sinaloa could erode what is otherwise a strongly positioned low-cost profile in our database of Mexican silver projects.

    The earlier 29 January report on the abduction of ten Vizsla Silver employees at Panuco shows this incident has already had a multi-week timeline, which typically complicates insurer responses and can delay decisions on camp design, bussing policies and security contracting for similar remote gold-silver camps in west-central Mexico.

    Among the 952 Mining stories in our coverage, relatively few high-grade silver projects (Panuco’s 249 g/t Ag with 102.7 million oz contained) are paired with this level of security risk, suggesting investors may start to price Mexican jurisdictional exposure more granularly by state rather than at the national level.

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    Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.

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