Mexico ‘hampered’ probe into apparent student massacre

Mexico ‘hampered’ probe into apparent student massacre

April 26, 2016
mexico
mexico




MEXICO CITY — A panel of international experts on Sunday accused Mexico’s government of undermining their probe into the fate of 43 trainee teachers apparently massacred in 2014, the most notorious human rights case in Mexico in recent years.

The independent panel said the government’s stonewalling stopped them from reaching the truth as they wrap up their work and prepare to leave Mexico.

The attorney general’s office, they said, did not let them re-interview detainees accused of the crime or obtain other information in a timely fashion. Prosecutors did not pursue investigative angles that the experts suggested.

“The delays in obtaining evidence that could be used to figure out possible lines of investigation translates into a decision (to allow) impunity,” the report by the experts, commissioned by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR), said.

The case has drawn international attention and stirred protests and outrage in Mexico, where violence has surged in a decade-long drug war. Lawlessness reigns in parts of the country and has tarnished President Enrique Pena Nieto’s reputation.

conference on Sunday attended by more than 1,000 people, the experts cast doubt on aspects of the government’s version of events.

They said in the report they had been repeatedly blocked in their efforts to obtain evidence from Mexican authorities.

“We feel that from January there was someone giving instructions to halt everything,” one of the experts, Angela Buitrago, said in an interview on Sunday night.

As the experts finished their remarks at the news conference, audience members yelled, “Don’t leave!“

Mexico’s government says that corrupt police in late 2014 handed the student teachers in the southwestern city of Iguala over to drug gang henchmen, who believed the trainees had been infiltrated by a rival gang. They then incinerated them at a garbage dump in the southwestern Mexican state of Guerrero.

While the experts’ probe showed the municipal police were mainly responsible for the disappearance of the students, they said the federal police should also be investigated. The remains of just one of the 43 students has been identified from a charred bone fragment. The government said it was found in the Rio San Juan, a river by the town of Cocula, near Iguala where the students disappeared. — Reuters


April 26, 2016
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