A 7-year-old girl was murdered in Mexico, fueling outrage over the disturbing number of recent slayings of women throughout the country.

The Mexico City prosecutor’s office confirmed Monday that a body discovered in a rural area on the southern outskirts of the city over the weekend belonged to the girl, who was abducted by a stranger on Feb. 11.

The cause of death has not been released yet for the girl, identified only as Fatima.

Five people have been questioned in the case, and there is video footage of her abduction, according to prosecutors.

The girl’s grandfather, Guillermo Anton Godínez, said Monday that a woman led Fatima away from the school.

She had left the school wearing her uniform, but the woman put a green shirt and pants on her, Godínez said.

The girl’s mother arrived 15 to 20 minutes after the woman already led her daughter away, according to Godínez.

“Justice has to be done, for my daughter and for all women,” Fatima’s mother, Maria Magdalena Antón, declared outside prosecutors’ offices.

Antón claimed investigators made the family wait hours and travel across the city before they could even file a missing person’s report.

“She could have been found alive, but nobody paid attention to us,” said Sonia López, the girl’s aunt.

López noted that there had been concerns about the mother’s ability to care for her children, but that city health and family welfare agencies had done nothing.

Only two days earlier, Ingrid Escamilla, a young Mexico City resident, was allegedly murdered by her boyfriend.

The man, who is under arrest, has confessed to stabbing Escamilla with a knife, mutilating her body and flushing part of her corpse into the sewer.

Locals grew increasingly outraged after local media published graphic photos of Escamilla’s skinned corpse, apparently leaked by city police officers.

“It enrages us how Ingrid was killed, and how the media put her body on display,” protesters said in a Friday statement.

Officials say 3,142 women were murdered in Mexico during the first 10 months of 2019, the BBC reported.

Only 726 of those are being treated as femicides, which women’s rights activists say is too small a number.

Over the past few months, protesters enraged over the murders have stormed the capital — vandalizing major monuments and buildings.

President Andrés Manuel López Obrador said Monday that “the issue has been manipulated a lot in the media” — but “we are working so that there won’t be any more women’s killings.”

With Post wires